Encyclopaedia of Impressionism Thames and Hudson Arts
Encyclopaedia of Impressionism Thames and Hudson Arts
Encyclopaedia of Impressionism Thames and Hudson Arts
Encyclopaedia
of Impressionism
BERNARD DENVIR
mm
mm
*F^T*3gKS*
4^
v# *&#'
Bernard Dcnvir
is the author of a four-volume documentary history
of taste in art, architecture and design in Britain, as well as of
books on Chardin, Impressionism, Post-Impressionism and
Fauvism. A contributor to many journals and magazines, he
was head of the Department of Art History at Ravensbourne
College of Art and Design, a member of the Council for
National Academic Awards, and for several years President
of the British section of the International Association of
Art Critics. A complementary volume in the World of Art
series is the author's The Impressionists at
First Hand (1987).
WORLD OF ART
This famous scries
IMPRESSIONISM
Bernard Denvir
BRIGHTON
For all my family
subsequent purchaser.
Subject index
Maps
10
THE ENCYCLOPAEDIA
13
General bibliography
232
Comparative chronology
233
Illustration credits
240
A reader's guide to the use of this book
Few periods in the history of art have received To enable the reader to investigate further
such intense examination over the past half- the necessarily concise information contained
century as the comparatively short one which within the text, virtually every individual entry
saw the flowering of Impressionism. During is provided with a selected bibliography.
the past decade a great deal of revisionism has Works which recur frequently are indicated by
been taking place in our perception of the the author's name followed by the date of
movement and the artists who participated in it. publication, e.g. Rewald (1973); a key to these
Much of this is to be found in recently published abbreviated references will be found in the
books such as T.J. Clark's The Painting of general bibliography on pp. 232-33, which
Modern Life (1985), John House's Monet; Nature also lists works dealing with the movement and
into Art (1986), and Robert L. Herbert's Impres- its practitioners as a whole.
sionism; Art, Leisure, and Parisian Society (1988); The subject index opposite is intended to
but much is also enshrined in specialist indicate the range of entries contained in the
periodicals and in the catalogues of the many encyclopaedia and in particular to draw atten-
important exhibitions relating to the Impres- tion to thematic entries which might not
sionists which have recently been mounted. An suggest themselves alphabetically. Within each
inevitable consequence of this great wealth of entry, subjects dealt with elsewhere are given in
material is that it is not always easy for the SMALL CAPITALS.
general reader to obtain convenient access to Black and white illustrations have been
information about specific individuals, themes specially selected to expand on information in
or related matters, without having recourse to a the text, with a particular emphasis on docu-
variety of books and periodicals, some of which mentary material. Where relevant illustrations
are contained only in specialized libraries. An appear under separate headings, rather than in
additional complication is the fact that even the the immediate vicinity of a particular entry, a
most exhaustive works, such as John Rewald's page reference is given in square brackets at the
History of Impressionism, do not list in their end of the entry. The colour plates on pp. 49-
indices thematic subjects, such as patronage, 56 and 217-224 have been chosen to illuminate
politics, social background or techniques. aspects of Impressionist painting which would
The aim of the Encyclopaedia of Impressionism not have been revealed in black and white.
is to present a concise compendium of informa- Maps of contemporary Paris and of sites
tion, based for the most part on recently connected with Impressionism will be found on
published work, relating to Impressionism, its pp. 10-12.
practitioners, ancillary figures such as patrons, A comparative chronology on pp. 233-37
models, dealers and critics, as well as to relevant sets the movement within its general historical
general themes which concern the movement as context, and world gazetteer of public
a
a whole, covering its social, political, economic galleries which contain important holdings of
and general historical context. Inevitably, such Impressionist works can be found on pp. 238-
a work is bound
to be selective, but it aims to 40; this is necessarily selective, and is to be
provide an accessible introduction to Impres- complemented by reference to the subject
sionism in all its aspects, as well as a permanent entries. Acknowledgments for the illustrations
source of reference. appear on p. 240.
Subject index
I I
ISSY
Overleaf: Dr Loth's illustrated plan of Paris, published by Scott and Ferguson of Edinburgh for British
Exposition Universelle of 1878. Above: The environs of Paris, showing the villages along the
visitors to the
Seine which attracted the Impressionists, from Dr Loth's map of Paris, 1878.
>Etretat
de Barfleur
WIT
\6odervSm
BALE DEL A S E I NE
Cap de la HeveL
/Montu'ilUws
\-*f J A
LEHAVBfF^
^
'40tmi
ForL m%essw<
iC^ *^ ^ ^ ^Jo7^oiaiUd\
^
mzM&l^^
yEsixjnj
i\^r.
*m 1?^* kmtmfeaue
'Jfolav
- ! O CT
Vrctteriue
o
a .<%fe^z^
I
lisieux
*&a
aS*Ld'-;
The Channel coast around the mouth of the Seine with the many resorts visited by the Impressionists, from
Baedecker's guide to Northern France, published in 1884.
12
Academic art
A
Academic art Forced by the necessary over-
simplifications of cultural journalism and the
stylistic antithesesevolved by crusading critics,
academic art and its traditions have been forced
into the role of villain in a melodrama in which
'modern' or avant-garde art is invariably the
hero. Nowhere is this more clearly evident than
in the history of ioth-c. French painting, partly
because of the accidents of history, and
partly because of the national character, with its
passion for rationalizing even the most intrac-
table areas of human activity. Basically initiated
by Colbert in the reign of Louis XIV, the
Academie Royale des Beaux-Arts was
officially constituted in 1664 and represented an
attempt a successful one at that to harness art
into the service of the state, to which it would
be bound not only by systems of control, but by
patronage too. It was indeed this identification
with the state that, in an age of unrest and
revolution such as the 19th c, exacerbated the
division between academic art - seen as the art A.W. Bouguereau's Nymphs and a Satyr (1873)
of the establishment and 'revolutionary art', typifies the classical connotations of academic art.
which at various times could mean the realism
of courbet, the technical innovations of tive and pedagogic changes. The Ecole des
Impressionism, or even the bucolic nostalgia of Beaux-Arts established a closer relationship
MILLET. with the ateliers of individual artists and, in the
In essence, the structure of the academic shake-up of the French educational system
system was based on the guild system that had which took place in 1863, the Ecole des Beaux-
survived from the Middle Ages. For instance, it Arts was taken away from the Academy and
retained the principle of apprenticeship, though transferred directly to the state. However, the
this level of training was not carried out within effects were so catastrophic that the move was
the Academy but in the atelier of a master, rescinded ten years later.
with whom the eleve worked and, indeed, until The authoritarianism of the academic system
the end of the 18th c, lived. The creation of the - with its emphasis on tradition rather than on
ecole des beaux-arts in 1795 more or less the new Romantic conception of originality, its
coincided with the dissolution of the Academy belief that by controlling education you
art
as such (1793), though the change was one of could control style, and its virtual stranglehold
nomenclature rather than of intention, its place on most forms of official patronage was
being taken by the institut. This had a fine arts clearly defined in the early part of the century
division eventually renamed the Academy in by Quatremere de Quincy (1755 1849), who
1 8 which recruited teachers for the Ecole
16 became the secretaire perpetuel of the Academy.
des Beaux-Arts; it supervised those compe- He emphasized both the importance of tra-
titions that allowed artists to make their way up dition and the of certain genres
relative values
the scale of promotion, including especially the of painting, the most important being history
all-important Prix de Rome; requested help painting (which also included religious and
and patronage from the government; and gave biblical subjects). But it would be a gross
expert advice or assistance on those matters of exaggeration to think of this as being in any
national interest that touched on the fine or way a consistent element. Changes were con-
applied arts. There were constant administra- stantly taking place within the overall concept
13
Academie Julian
considerable overlap between pure academic, Meridional; dark eyes, crafty and watchful, a
official art. and other, newer forms. The success seductively mendacious manner and a sensual
which the Impressionists were achieving by this mind", was himself a painter, who exhibited at
time meant in fact that they could not be the salon des refuses. He supervised the
disregarded. In 1881 there was a project for running of the studios, setting the pose for the
getting Manet and his 'pupils' together with model for a week at a time. He also arranged for
carolls-duran. Jean-Charles Cazin and bes- weekly tuition sessions by well-known painters
nard. who were more or less accepted aca- such as Bouguereau. The fees were 40 francs a
demic painters, to decorate the newly built month.
Trocadero. and in 1879 Manet himself had Although its primary intention had been to
made an official request to the Prefect ot the prepare students for the ecole des beaux-arts.
Seine to paint one of the ceilings in the rebuilt the Academie Julian developed characteristics
Hotel de Ville. It must be noted, too. that many that made it especially attractive to enterprising
of the Impressionists confessed their debt to the young artists: the teaching was flexible, and
academic painters who had been their teachers. there were no restrictions: it was open every
Of gleyre. who in the generally accepted art day except Sunday, from eight in the morning
histories ot the first half of this century was until nightfall - other teaching institutions were
usually dismissed as a bumbling traditionalist. closed in the afternoon: there were no entry
Renoir said to vollard 'It was from Gleyre that requirements, and was much frequented by
it
I learnt my trade as a painter'; and bazille said foreigners, who were excluded from the official
that Gleyre had taught him all he knew as a educational system. Amongst those who stu-
painter. Artists as disparate as whistler. died there were George moore. William Roth-
Georges du Maurier and Edward Poynter were enstein and the German Expressionist Lovis
and all paid tribute to his fostering of
his pupils, Corinth. Although not a student there himself.
originality. gauguin was closely connected with many
Albert Boime has pointed out that the 19th c. who were, whom he met in nearby cafes. See
saw the evolution of a painting as consisting ot also ATELIER SYSTEM
two phases, the generative and the productive, Letheve (1972); C. Fehrer. 'New Light on the
and that, in the course of the century, the Academie Julian', m Gazette des Beaux-Arts
emphasis was shifted from the second to the first (May-June 1984); Milner (1988)
- a process mainly represented by Impression-
ism. The shift occurred within the framework Academie Suisse More a convenient place to
of academic teaching, which by emphasizing paint anddraw than an academie as such, it had
the difference between the preliminary sketch been founded by a retired model, and provided
and the 'smooth', finished work confirmed the no teaching or supervision, but a plenitude of
independence of the former, thus allowing the models and accommodation. Situated on the
independants to systematize it and create an Quai des Orfevres. it was frequented by
aesthetic climate in which spontaneity, indivi- CEZANNE. PISSARRO. MONET and GUILLAUMIN.
dual vision and immediacy of sensation came to See also atelier system, bonvin. guillemet.
be seen as criteria of excellence. The period, he PIETTE
concludes, should be seen not as a heroic "Rewald (1973); Rewald (1984); Boime (1986)
struggle of progressives against reactionaries,
but as one in which the Academy made a Aix-en-Provence Described in the 18th c. by
contribution, albeit often unintentional, to the the traveller Charles de Brosses as the most
evolution ot 'progressive' tendencies. See also beautiful city in France.Aix was the birthplace
CORMON. COUTURE. GEROME. GUICHARD. TECH- of zola. cezanne. Paul alexis. and many other
NIQUE [64, 100, 150, 151, igz] writers and painters of distinction. Rich in
N. Pevsner. Academies of Art, Past and Present private collections and possessing in the Musee
(1940); Sloane (1951); Boime (1986) Granet (founded by a pupil of David) an
impressive public art gallery, which greatly
Academie Julian Started in 1873 by influenced the young Cezanne, it had a flourish-
Rodolphe Julian in an old dance hall in the ing art school, a number of art dealers, and an
Passage des Panoramas, by the 1 880s it had three active exhibiting society. The surrounding
"4
Algiers
15
1
Ambre, Emilie
16
Antecedents
17
Antecedents
paint thatbecame characteristic of the Impres- back of which he noted the date and time at
sionistmovement. At a different level, the which they were painted as Monet did with
discovery of the art of japan and an awakened many of his works were not generally known
interest in popular prints,such as the Images in France until the late 1870s, there was an
d'Epinal, added new elements to the historical awareness of his concern with the transient
palimpsest which was absorbed into Imp- effects of light and atmosphere.
ressionism. Turner's influence is a little less clear, signac,
Perhaps the most widely noted influence is in his book on the development of French
that of Constable, Turner and the English painting in the 19th c, D' Eugene Delacroix au
watercolourists (see England). The most fre- neo-impressionnisme (Paris, 1899), emphasized
quently quoted reference to this is from a letter very strongly the influence of his 'placing a
by pissarro to dewhurst, printed in the latter's number of strokes of different colours, one
book Impressionist Painting (London, 1904): beside the other, and reproducing at a distance
'Monet and I were very enthusiastic about the the desired effect'. But this was perhaps special
London landscapes. . . . We worked from pleading, as it approximated so closely to a
nature. We also visited the museums. The vindication of Signac's own theories, monet
watercolours and paintings of Turner and of seems to have been the most concerned of the
Constable, the canvases of Old Crome, have group with Turner's work and techniques,
certainly had an influence on us. We admired though this interest only dates from the 1880s,
Gainsborough, Lawrence, Reynolds, etc., but when he was visiting London quite frequently.
we were struck chiefly by the landscape Despite superficial affinities to Turner in a work
painters, who shared more in our aim with such as the famous Impression: Sunrise of 1872
regard to plein-air, light and fugitive effects. (Musee Marmottan, Paris) his work shows no
Watts, Rossetti interested us among the similaritieswith either his handling or colour
modern men.' The French had been exposed to range. He was certainly impressed by Turner's
Constable since at least 1824, when his View on resolute plein-air approach to painting and was
the Stour (18 19) and his Haywain (1820; both in also aware, in developing his 'series' paintings,
the National Gallery, London) won gold of the had produced
fact that the English painter
medals at the salon. This had been due very pictures of the same place at differing times of
largely to two dealers, Edouard Schroth and day (e.g. the two views of Tabley House shown
John arrowsmith, both of whom were close at the Royal Academy in 1809, and the three
friends of Jean-Marie-Fortune Ruel, father of watercolours of differing light effects on Mount
durand-ruel; when in 1841 the Englishman Rigi in his set of Swiss views of 184142).
went bankrupt, he was helped by Durand-Ruel It seems certain that most of the English
to re-establish himself, and it was in Schroth's influenceon the Impressionists had been filtered
gallery that Delacroix first saw the works of through the sensibilities of the generation of
Bonington. Arrowsmith opened a brasserie in boudin and Daubigny. In any case their
Paris, frequented by Theodore rousseau and enthusiasm was not maintained. Monet con-
his friends, which contained a 'Salon fessed to the art dealerRene Gimpel in 191 8,
Constable', where the artist's paintings were on 'Once I liked Turner very much, but now I like
view; Ruel bought several from him, and it was him less - he did not lay out his colour carefully
18
Arrowsmith, John
by adding
m
'Turner and Constable, while they taught us
something, showed us in their works that they
had no understanding of the analysis of colour,
which in Turner's painting is simply used as an
effect; a mere absence of light.' See also bar-
BIZON, GERMANY, IMPRESSIONISM, ITALY [114]
Sloane (1951); Champa (1973); Rewald
(1973)
its relaxed atmosphere, marked by the presence whom he found a job in the financial world on
of the Parisian petit-bourgeois seeking their the latter's return to Paris in 1871. His wife
weekend pleasures, the painters who worked Margaret was an amateur painter, and encour-
together exerted on each other an influence that aged the young Gauguin in his interest in
welded them together; using similar techniques painting. See also patrons and collectors
on identical subjects, they adopted common Rewald (1973)
attitudes to plein-air painting and to that
depiction of light which gives validity to the Arrowsmith, John (1798-1873) A member of
concept of Impressionism as a coherent move- a well-known English family of map-printers,
ment. See also technique [36, 168] he was a close friend of Constable, whom he
19
L'Artiste
***52S
rousseau and One of Arrowsmith's
his friends.
Jjf&_^ML
close friendswas Jean-Marie-Fortune Ruel,
father of durand-ruel, who bought several
works by Constable from him, thus establish-
$M P^jMfcL
ing a direct link between Impressionism and
this particular aspect of the English tradition. y&(tfjrk^9k
His sister married Daguerre. See ENGLAND
Venturi (1939)
^h|^ >^^s. 1 ^2w ^k^^^H^
L'Artiste An monthly magazine,
illustrated
founded in the 1840s, which had the same
standing in France as the Magazine of Art in
England. Although generally conservative in
\ijSBsgBl
its outlook, and originally hostile to the
Impressionists, it changed its attitude when
Arsene houssaye was appointed as one of its ------ - -..
directors and became generally supportive, 3 - >
manet. To celebrate the salon des refuses, he was the atelier system, which basically consisted
brought out a daily paper for its duration, in in a would-be painter working in an older
which he lauded the participating artists, des- painter's studio, in a position that was midway
cribing Manet as 'one of the greatest artistic between that of an apprentice and a pupil.
characters of his time'. In 1865 he hailed the Largely abandoned in England and even in the
genius of monet and was responsible for French provinces by 1850, it provided the
introducing him to Manet. He wrote the background against which all the Impressionists
introduction to the catalogue of the one-man had their first real experience of art, and was
exhibition that Manet arranged in a pavilion given a degree of vitality and even official
outside the Exposition Universelle of 1867. He standing by its frequently close relationship to
appears seated beside Manet in fantin-latour's the Academy, from which most of its practi-
A Studio in the Batignolles Quarter (1879; Musee tioners came. Virtually all those who entered an
d'Orsay), and was painted by bazille (c. 1869; atelier did so in the hope of winning the Prix de
20
Atelier system
colours, heavily diluted to secure a rapid must get into the way of catching nature on the
notation of general beginning with local
effects, wing'. Landscape played an important part in
middle tones and
highlights, then proceeding to his teaching, and he took his students out to the
ending with the deepest shadows; the student fields, and sometimes on trips to the Normandy
was warned especially to set down the indivi- coast. Although Manet's criticism of Couture's
dual tones carefully beside each other, and not atelier is well known - 'When I arrive I feel as
to allow them to mix on The sketch
the canvas. though I were entering tomb. Everything that
a
was then allowed to dry and gradually worked meets the eye is ridiculous. The light is wrong;
up into a smoothly finished painting. The the shadows are wrong' - many of his early
mastery of technical skills was considered all- works show the influence of his teacher, with
important, and the success of any master of an whom, incidentally, he stayed for six years.
atelier was measured in terms of how effective Two of pissarro's closest friends in the early
he was in communicating them. Drawing 1 86OS, OLLER Y CESTERO and Ludovic PIETTE,
techniques were taught in a more or less whose technique at this time was much more
standard way; it was with painting that the experimental than his own, had been pupils of
traditions of an atelier varied, and these varia- Couture, and cezanne always kept a reproduc-
tions had most influence on pupils. tion of Les Romains de la decadence in his studio.
couture, who was the teacher of manet and RENOIR, MONET, SISLEY, BAZILLE and WHISTLER
puvis de chavannes, opened his studio in 1847 attended gleyre's atelier. He, too, was an
on the groundswell of his successful Romains de opponent of official art education, and attracted
la decadence (Musee d'Orsay) and claimed in his little attention or patronage from officialdom.
prospectus that he 'opposes the spurious classi- Regarded as an original, if not an eccentric, he
cal school which reproduces the works of strongly emphasized originality in his teaching
21
Auvers-sur-Oise
Atelier system: A paintbrush duel at the Ecole Cezanne painted this view of Dr Gachet's house at
and advised, 'Do not draw on anyone's unpleasing.' There are countless descriptions of
resources but your own.' Bazille, who wrote the boisterous atmosphere that prevailed in
that Gleyre had taught him his metier, added these ateliers, but thiswas indicative of another
that as a consequence of his teaching, 'I shall at merit of the atelier system: the constant inter-
least be able to boast that I have not copied change of ideas about art and techniques
anyone.' Gleyre's method of teaching allowed amongst the students themselves. As Du Maur-
students a great deal of latitude, and in a letter to ier put it, 'All were animated by a certain esprit
his parents Bazille recorded that 'M. Gleyre de corps, working very happily and genuinely
comes twice a week and has a word with each together, and always willing to help each other
pupil, correcting his drawing or painting. with sincere artistic counsel, if it was asked for
Every now and again he assigns the subject of a seriously,though it was not always couched in
composition, which everyone carries out as best terms very flattering to one's self-love.' There
he can.' In 1894 Georges du Maurier described can be no doubt that the nursery of Impression-
in his novel Trilby (1894) the kind of timetable ism was the studio of Gleyre. See also academie
that operated during his student days there: 'We JULIAN, ACADEMIE SUISSE, CORMON, ECOLE DES
drew and painted from the male model every BEAUX-ARTS, TECHNIQUE [15, 64, yg]
day but Sunday, from eight till twelve and for L. Ormond, George du Maurier (1969);
two hours in the afternoon, except on Satur- Letheve (1972); Boime (1986)
days, when the afternoon was dedicated to a
much-needed cleaning of the Augean stables. Auvers-sur-Oise Like argenteuil, this little
One week the model was male, the next female village on the banks of the river Oise was a
and so on, alternating throughout the year. A leading centre of Impressionism, where its
stove, amodel throne, stools, boxes, some fifty practitioners came into close and creative
strongly built low chairs with backs, a couple of contact with each other. It had become a
score easels and many drawing boards com- popular place for artists in the late 1850s when
pleted the mobilier. The bare walls were Daumier (who died in the neighbourhood),
adorned with endless caricatures in charcoal and daubigny and corot worked there. Berthe
white chalk and also the scrapings of many morisot came there frequently to visit her
palettes - a polychromous decoration not sister, and dr gachet bought a house in the
22
Barbizon
De Balleroy is the last standing figure on the right of Fantin-Latour's Hommage a Delacroix
(1864),which includes, from left to right, Cordier, Duranty, Legros, Fantin-Latour, Whistler,
Champfleury, Manet, Bracquemond and Baudelaire.
village shortly after the outbreak of the Balleroy, Comte Albert de (1828-73) A
franco-prussian war, where he entertained close friend who rented a studio with
of manet,
his Impressionist friends, cezanne painted him in the rue Lavoisier, he was very much part
several pictures of the place, including one of of the fashionable world which Manet fre-
the doctor's house (c. 1873; Collection of Mrs quented in the 1860s; in La Musique aux
Mary Fosburgh, New York), as did renoir, Tuileries (1862; National Gallery, London) he is
guillaumin and sisley. Some of van gogh's shown standing beside Manet. Predominantly
last works were of scenes in the neighbourhood. an animal-painter, renowned for the brilliance
See also murer, pontoise [93] of his technique, he exhibited regularly at the
n Rewald (1984); Herbert (1988) salon between 1853 and his death, and was also
well known for his etchings. He was
of a friend
fantin-latour, who painted him, again stand-
ing beside Manet, in Hommage a Delacroix
(1864; Musee d'Orsay). [go]
A. Tabarant, Manet et ses oeuvres (1947); K.
23
Barnes, Alfred
24
Batignolles
A photograph of the Place de Clichy in Batignolles, taken in 1900, reveals the lively Paris cityscape which
so appealed to the Impressionists.
from the neighbourhood of the Gare Saint- pissarro several times painted the Place du
Lazare to the industrialized suburb of Batig- Havre, outside the station, from a room in the
nolles, which, like its neighbour montmartre, Hotel Gamier. In the rue de Rome at number
had been absorbed into greater Paris. Its main 89, mallarme held his famous evenings, thus
thoroughfare was the boulevard des Batig- ensuring the continuance of degas' interest in
nolles, formed in 1863, but the surrounding the area.
streets and squares became a virtual alternative But Batignolles has a greater significance in
Left Bank, baudelaire lived in the rue d' Am- the history of Impressionism than as a popular
sterdam, which ran north from the Gare Saint- area for its practitioners; it was the first name
Lazare to the boulevard, and two doors away given to that group of artists who made up the
was Alphonse daudet. manet had a studio here movement and who came generally to be
in 1879, though earlier he had lived at 34 described by contemporary critics as the Batig-
boulevard des Batignolles and then in the rue de nolles group. This came about very largely
St-Petersbourg, the setting for fantin-latour's because by c. 1 866 Manet had begun to frequent
A Studio in the Batignolles Quarter (1870; Musee the cafe guerbois at 1 1 Grande rue des
d'Orsay). caillebotte, who
with his
lived Batignolles, which by 1869 was established as a
parents on the nearby rue Mirmonsil, took the regular meeting place Thursday was the
intersection of the rue de St-Petersbourg and favourite day. monet remembered these
the Place de Clichy as the subject of one of occasions vividly in his old age: 'Nothing could
Impressionism's most memorable townscapes, have been more interesting than these meetings
Rue Art Institute of
de Paris, temps de pluie (1877; and the discussions which went with them.
Chicago). Renoir and bazille lived at 9 rue de la There was a constant clash of opinions. They
Condamine. Manet himself did several paint- kept our wits sharpened, they supplied us with
ings of the rue Mosnier, a new street that ran reserves of enthusiasm that inspired us for
northwards from just opposite his studio weeks and weeks until we accomplished what
window on the rue de St Petersbourg, and we had thought of. From these discussions we
25
Baudelaire, Charles Pierre
emerged with a stronger will, more clearly an apologia for one aspect of Impressionism:
defined ideas, and our thoughts clearer and 'The past is interesting not only because of the
more distinct.' Those who took part in the beauty which the artists of the past - whose
meetings were Manet, Pissarro, Monet, sisley, present was - have extracted from it, but
it
mistress Jeanne Duval and began a career as a sentiments which persuaded manet, who had
poet and writer. His influence on succeeding once painted himself and his wife in the
generations was formidable, largely because he costumes of the Rubens period, and who at this
substituted for the rather slack rhetoric of the time was concentrating on picturesque Spanish
earlier a more rigorous self-
Romanticists subjects,to opt entirely for subjects from
analysis, combined with a quest for intense contemporary life. Manet had met Baudelaire
sensation which led him, on the one hand, to in 1858 and they became close friends, Manet
dependence on opium and alcohol but, on the producing two etchings of the poet - one
other, to the production of some of the most informal, the other resembling a title page - as
powerful verse in the French language. well as a rough
sketch of his funeral (1867;
oil
Deeply interested in art, a friend of Dela- Metropolitan Museum, New York). Four years
croix, Daumier and others, as well as an after Manet had produced it, the more formal
habitue of the brasserie des martyrs and other etching was used as the frontispiece to the first
artistic haunts, he produced in 1845 and 1846 biography of the poet, Charles Asselineau's
reviews of the annual salons that struck a new Charles Baudelaire; sa vie et son oeuvre. In the
note in art criticism. Although reflecting the Revue anecdotique of 2 April 1862 Baudelaire
influence of his 1 8th-c. predecessor in the genre, published, anonymously, an article entitled
Denis Diderot (1713-84), and the kind of 'L'eau-forte est a la mode', which he then
sensibility expressed by Stendhal (1783-1842), reproduced in a much more extended form as
his own visual awareness gave his writings on 'Peintres et Aqua-fortistes' in Le Boulevard on
art a vitality and spontaneity which compen- 14 September in the same year. He praised
sated for their occasional lapses of judgment. BRACQUEMOND, JONGKIND, MILLET, DAUBIGNY,
His was the first consistent attempt to elevate as well as Legros and Manet; of the latter he said,
subjective judgment
to the level of a final 'M. Manet is the painter of The Spanish Singer
criterion, uncontaminated by aesthetic ground- [i860; Metropolitan Museum, New York],
rules or ideological canons of taste. Initially which created a stir at the last Salon. At the next
preoccupied with the dichotomy between the Salon we are promised several pictures by him
art of Ingres and that of Delacroix, he devoted [e.g. Mile Victorine in the Costume of an Espada
some of his most powerful passages to the Metropolitan Museum, New York] spiced
defence and praise of the latter, showing an with the strongest Spanish flavour, which
antipathy to realistic techniques that owed not a suggest that the genius of Spain has come to take
little to his own poetic experience. His dislike its abode in France.' (Two years later in a letter
did not extend to realism itself, however. He to the critic Theophile Thore, Baudelaire
admired courbet's vitality and, in Le Peintre de denied that Manet relied on the Spanish school,
la vie moderne (1863), devoted to the work of and even suggested that at this point he had seen
Constantin guys, he outlined a theory of no Spanish paintings, which was palpably
contemporary realism in art which could act as untrue.) In his review of the Salon of 1859,
26
Bazille, Frederic
J. Baudot, Renoir, ses amis, ses modeles (1949); daubigny and others have promised to send us
Roberts and Roberts (1987) pictures, and very much approve of our idea.
27
Belgium
In 1870 Bazille painted che interior ot his studio in the rue de la Condamine. He
tall figure with a palette in his hand.
With these people and Monet, who is stronger Belgium Created a nation in 1831. Belgium
than all of them, we are sure to succeed.' A was a French enclave within a Flemish country,
regular attender at the social gatherings of the a Catholic state within a Protestant environ-
cafe guerbois, he himself took a large studio in ment, and throughout the 19th c. its connec-
the rue de la Condamine off the boulevard de tions with Pans were intimate. It was a place for
Clichy which he generously lent to his
in 1868, French refugees of all kinds, from baudelaire
friends,and where he entertained musicians and to Boulanger. and. especially during the
writers as well as painters. In his painting of the franco-Prussian war and the disturbances that
studio (1870; Musee d'Orsay) he shows the followed it. Brussels was crowded with French
musician maitre at the piano, zola leaning over artists, such as boudin and diaz (who attracted a
the staircase speaking to Renoir, who is seated considerable body of patrons there), and
on a table; and MANET, smoking his inevitable dealers, such as durand-ruel. who opened a
pipe, looking at a painting on the easel, with gallery in the Place des Martyrs. He had rented
Monet behind him; the figure of Bazille himself the premises from a well-known Belgian pho-
was painted in by Manet. Clear-minded, practi- tographer. Ghemar. and built up an impressive
cal,widely read and explorative m his tastes - it list of customers, including the Prime Minister
was he who introduced Renoir to the as yet Van Praet, and Pierre Allard. the director of the
largely unrecognized genius of Wagner - he Mint. The Belgians had always been quick to
would almost certainly have been one of the detect the new tendencies in French painting.
dominant figures in the movement that was to courbet commanded a following there,
come into being four vears after his death. See especially - for some obscure reason - in
also MUSIC. PHOTOGRAPHY. PLEIN-AIRISME. POR- Antwerp, and the barbizon painters had a
TRAITURE. SOCIAL BACKGROUND [86, 1J1, 20$] strong influence on a whole group of Belgian
G. Poulain. Bazille et ses amis (1932); F. Daulte. artists, including Hippolyte Boulenger (1837-
Frederic Bazille et son temps (1952); Frederic 74) and Alphonse Asselbergs (1839 1916), all of
Bazille, Musee Fabre. Montpellier, exhibition whom worked in and around Tervueren near
catalogue (Oct. 1959) Brussels. The influence of the Impressionists,
2^
Belgium
m ~ r>
CLOTURE 3 MARS
Artistes invites : ?isgtu**
vlM Albeit BESNARD Anna BOCH
BRACUCEMOND ! F CHARJJST
Bean CROSS G CHAJRIJKR"'
Marcel) uiDE8BOUTEN Henry DE GROHSf
Paul DE VtGNB P*al DU BOiS W*
EioxaaattelFREMJET James SNBOR
Paul GAUGUIN A.-W FINCM
Max KLXNGBR KHHOFFF
Majamiliea LUCE
OnmlMtill MEUNTER
Claude MOKBT
MOREAU-NELATON WOhr_BCHLOBACH
8CHLC
Camille PISSARRO Ju TO0ROP
Georgo 8EURAT
R-WUaoc 8TBSB.
William STOTT
W-B THOLEN
Belgium: van Rysselberghe's poster for Boulenger's Avenue of Elms at Tervueren (1871)
the sixth exhibition of Les Vingt. shows the early influence of Barbizon in Belgium.
however, became increasingly apparent in the refused to participate. In 1886 Renoir sent eight
work of the seascape painter Louis Artan (1837 works, including Madame Charpentier and her
90) and of Alfred Verwee (1838-95); together Children (1878; Metropolitan Museum, New
they founded the Societe Libre des Beaux-Arts, York), Monet exhibited ten, and, in following
which became a centre for 'new' art. years, Pissarro and cezanne sent considerable
The Belgians seem to have had a particular numbers of paintings. Later bracquemond,
penchant for such organizations, for the crea- Rodin, van gogh, whistler and the Pointillists
tion of Les Vingt in 1883 was to mark another were also exhibitors. In 1893 Les Vingt was
stage in the impact of Impressionism, involving disbanded, but Octave Maus created a similar
as it did extensive exposure of the works of the institution Le Libre Esthetique which
French Impressionists. The group got its name continued until the German invasion and
from the fact that it was originally composed of which, though it tended to be dominated by the
20 artists, but it was given its dynamism and post-impressionists, still gave a good deal of
significance by the activities of Octave maus, exposure to the earlier generation, especially
who arranged annual exhibitions that included Renoir.
works not only by members but by invited The effect of all this was to attract a
artists from other countries. These were always considerable number of Belgian artists to
very popular and controversial events and, Impressionism. The most consistent of these
though the bias of the group was anti-official, was Emile Claus (1 849-1924), who had a large
they were usually held in official buildings. The body of followers and was one of the founders
French Impressionists played a prominent, if of Les Vingt. He won his original fame as an
not a dominant, role, and amongst those who exponent of realistic genre painting in the style
exhibited were renoir, monet, sisley, pissarro of Jules Bastien-Lepage but, as a result of the
and gauguin. degas, however, who had visited Impressionist works he had seen in the Les
Brussels in 1869 and had not only sold three Vingt exhibitions and of the writings of the
paintings but had been offered a contract by critic Camille Lemonnier in the pages of the
Alfred Stevens (though nothing came of it), influential magazine L'Art libre, he turned to
29
Beliard, Edouard
Impressionist techniques and approaches, being 1793-1917 (1958); Degas, Grand Palais, Paris,
especially dependent on Monet. There were exhibition catalogue (1988)
others, however, such as Theo van Ryssel-
berghe (i 862-1926), who, having felt the initial Bellio, Georges de (1835-94) A devoted
impact of Impressionism, were seduced by friend and patron of many of the Impression-
seurat into modified forms of Pointillism. he was a doctor of Romanian origin, who
ists,
Even the highly original, and eccentric, James from a very early stage in his life had been an
Ensor (1860-1949) experienced the liberating avid collector of paintings. One of his great
effects of the movement, and his graphic works merits was that, whether from a desire to be
in particular for long reflected Impressionistic helpful or from shrewd commercial instincts,
techniques. See also joyant [47] he invariably bought paintings that were slow
cM.O. Maus, Trente arts de lutter pour I'art 1884 to 'move', several of which he lent to the
30
Blanc, Charles
Honour of 20 rue Pigalle, Paris, represent me, won the Prix de Rome,being a pupil of
after
and deliver to me at Grasse the insignia of the Cabanel at the ecole des beaux-arts. Despite
Legion of Honour'. He also accompanied him the academic bent of his art, he was greatly
on a trip to Holland, mainly to see the influenced by the Impressionists and their
museums and art galleries there. In addition to followers. He painted nudes in the style of
the portraits of the Berard family he produced Renoir, portraits in the style of sargent, and
at Wargemont, Renoir also painted a number decorative paintings in the style of puvis de
of landscapes in the grounds of the chateau. chavannes. In London, where he lived for
M. Berard, Renoir a Wargemont (1939); F. three years between 1881 and 1883, he took up
Daulte, 'Renoir et la famille Berard', in L'Oeil etching under the influence of legros. He
(Feb. 1974); Renoir, Hayward Gallery, London, became an influential critic in Paris, and
exhibition catalogue (1985) honours rained on him: in 19 13 he became
director of the French School at Rome, and in
Bernard, Emile (1 868-1941) A painter and 1922 of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts. A member of
criticof singular distinction who played an the institut, he received the Grand Cross of the
important part in the later development of the Legion of Honour, and was the first artist to be
accorded a state funeral in the Louvre.
C. Mauclair, Albert Besnard, I'homme et
I'oeuvre (1914)
31
Blanche, Jacques-Emile
considerable impact on the young seurat. See and supporter of courbet, he held progressive
also MANTZ views which led him to promote all new
C. Blanc. Grammaire des arts du dessin (1867), movements in art. When in 1857 painters such
mon temps (1876); Dictionnaire de
Les Artistes de aswhistler and fantin-latour were rejected
biographie franqaise by the salon, he arranged an exhibition of their
work in his own studio. This made a consider-
Blanche, Jacques-Emile (1 861-1942) More able impact and could be seen as one of the
remarkable, perhaps, for his brisk social life and earliest foci of rebellion against the official
his fund of anecdotes than for his slight, though system. He went to London in 1871, thus
real, gifts as a painter, predominantly of por- strengthening his links with painters such as
traits, he cultivated his contacts with the monet, daubigny and legros, who were also
Impressionists and recorded them in the various there at the time. Giving up his job to become a
autobiographical works he produced. A pupil full-time artist, he had only
moderate success,
a
of Henri gervex, who was a friend of renoir, and his last years were blighted by virtual
Blanche was also in contact with degas and had blindness. See also brasserie des martyrs
an overwhelming admiration for manet. A U. Thieme and F. Becker, Allgemeines Lexicon
dedicated Anglophile, he helped to strengthen der bildenden Kunstler (1950); G. Norman,
the links between Impressionism and its English Nineteenth-Century Painters and Painting (1977)
disciples. See also halevy
J.-E. Blanche, Propos de peintres de David a Boudin, Eugene (1824-98) 'My eyes were
Degas (19 19), Portraits of a Lifetime (1937), More really opened, and I understood nature.
finally
Portraits of a Lifetime (1939) I learned at the same time to love it', wrote
32
Bougival
Boudin's painting of the Empress Eugenie and her suite at the popular resort of Trouville, 1863, has an
informality of approach and freshness of observation which explain his appeal to the Impressionists.
one's studio.' This alone would have been a ANTECEDENTS, DRAWING, PASTELS, PLEIN-AIRISME
major contribution to the genius of Impression- Rewald (1973); R. Schmitt, Eugene Boudin (3
ism, but throughout the whole of his career vols.; 1973)
Boudin's concern with atmosphere, with the
nature of light, with the transience of visual Bougival One of the popular Parisian resorts
sensation, was to make him a constant source of on the Seine which, despite the presence along
inspiration to painters of the younger gener- its banks of sawmills, docking facilities and
ation. He became the father-figure of a whole chalk quarries, still offered the semblance of a
group of painters, including jongkind, who rural retreat. The area had first been developed
were to make the Normandy coast the subject by Louis XIV and contained a number of
of their creative attention, and who were chateaux, whilst more recently, celebrities such
centred on honfleur and Le Havre. Another as Alexandre Dumas, the politician Odilon
aspect of Boudin's work which brought him Barrot, and the Pereire brothers, bankers whose
close to the Impressionists was his belief that railways served the area, had built houses for
ordinary urban, middle-class people were just themselves there. A new bridge had been built
as worthy of the artist's attention as were in 1858 to span the two branches of the Seine
picturesque peasants. between Bougival and Croissy, and three
Although he participated in the first impres- islands in the river provided space for establish-
sionist exhibition, he held himself aloof from ments Such as LA GRENOUILLERE.
art politics generally,though the fact that his In the 1 830s a number of artists had come to
dealers were usually those who marketed the live in the area, and Souvent's inn at Bougival
work of the Impressionists meant that his works was frequented by painters such as corot,
were often exhibited with theirs. In 1905, for Celestin Nanteuil, Ferdinand Heilbuth and
instance, an exhibitionof 'Impressionist Paint- others.The goncourts on a visit there in 1855
ings' at Grafton Galleries in London
the commented, 'Bougival is the homeland of
included 38 of his works, one of which was landscape, its very studio, where every patch of
bought by the National Gallery. His success at ground reminds you of an exhibition, and
the salons and elsewhere in later life was wherever you go you hear people saying "this
clouded by ill-health and depression. See also was painted by so-and-so; that drawn by
33
Boulogne
Williamstown, Mass.; Renoir's La Grenouillere the same year, and his Beach Scene (1869;
1869; Oscar Reinhart Collection, Winterthur), National Gallery, London) seems to have been
and it was here that the most specifically painted in the neighbourhood.
recognizable Impressionist paintings were pro- = Herbert (1988)
duced some five years before the first exhibi-
tion, sisley lived at Louveciennes and nearby- Boussod and Valadon Etienne Boussod was
Marly between 1870 and 1877, and it was he the successor of goupil, whose granddaughter
who produced the most extensive body of he had married. Together with Pierre Valadon,
paintings of the area (e.g. Floods at Port-Marly he started the firm cumbersomely known as
1876; Musee d'Orsay). 'Goupil-Boussod et Valadon Successeurs'.
They operated from a luxurious gallery in the
Place de l'Opera, with a branch at 19 boulevard
montmartre and a printing works for produc-
ing reproductions at 9 rue Chaptal. One of the
main activities of the firm was selling salon
paintings, but from 1879 onwards the Mont-
martre branch was virtually under the control
of theo van GOGH, who was very conversant
with the activities of durand-ruel and of his
rival Georges petit, and who was absolutely
convinced of the importance of the
Impressionists.
By the mid-i88os the firm was quite deeply
entrenched in the buying and selling of works
by monet, sisley, renoir and pissarro. The
proprietors were not in fact greatly pleased
with this activity, which was entirely sustained
Manet's lively view of the imminent departure of bv Van Gogh on his own initiative, and
the Folkestone boat from Boulogne in 1869. brought in negligible profits in comparison
34
Brasserie des Martyrs
35
Bruyas, Alfred
C
rousseau. It was probably through Baudelaire
that he came to be interested in the works of
manet, who, in gratitude for his support, gave
him the painting Peony Stems and Pruning Shears
(1864; Musee d'Orsay). Commenting on
renoir's Use (1867; Folkwang Museum, Essen), Cabaner (Jean de Cabannes) (1832-81) A
he noted, astutely for his time, 'The dress of musician and philosopher who moved exten-
3^
Cafes
sively in Impressionist circles. His portrait was be seen in renoir's painting of 1866 (National-
painted by manet in 1880 (Musee d'Orsay) and museum, Stockholm). The village had
he also appeared in renoir's The Artist's Studio achieved fame in artistic circles largely because
(1876; Santamarina Collection, Buenos Aires), of Henri Murger, author of Scenes de la vie de
where he is the second figure from the right, Boheme (184749), who stayed there for
seated beside pissarro. He introduced the lengthy periods in the 1850s, choosing Pere
unsociable cezanne to the delights of the Anthony's - as it was then called - for his
Nouvelle-Athenes, and was himself a frequent headquarters. The goncourts also stayed there
guest at the dinners given for the Impressionists during the same period and wrote: 'Here we
by murer in the 1870s. Cezanne gave him the live a family life. The sound of love-making can
Bathers of 1873 (Barnes Foundation, Merrion, be heard through the walls. We borrow soap
Pa.). When Cabaner died of tuberculosis, from one another and throw ourselves upon
Cezanne wrote to zola asking him, unsuccess- meagre meals with huge appetites. Even the
fully, to write a preface to the catalogue for the women get their shoes wet without
sale of Cabaner's collection. grumbling.'
A. Tabarant, Manet et ses oeuvres (1947); In a letter written to vollard some 30 years
Rewald (1984) afterhe had painted it, Renoir described the
scene he had chosen: 'The Inn of Mother
Cabaret de la mere Anthony Situated at Anthony is one of my pictures which I remem-
Marlotte in the forest of Fontainebleau, in the ber with most pleasure. not that I find the
It is
1860s it was much patronized by artists, includ- picture itself particularly exciting, but it does
ing courbet, pissarro, sisley and monet; they remind me of good old Mother Anthony and
covered the walls with caricatures, which can her inn at Marlotte. That really was a village
inn! I took the main bar, which doubled as a
dining room, as the subject of my study. The
old woman in a headscarf is Mother Anthony
herself, and the splendid girl serving the drinks
is her barmaid Nana. The white poodle is Toto,
who had a I had some of my
wooden leg.
friends, including Sisley and le coeur, pose
round the table. The motifs that make up the
background were borrowed scenes painted on
the wall; they were unpretentious and often
successful paintings by the regulars. I myself
drew a sketch of Murger on the wall, and
copied it in the upper left-hand corner of the
painting.' See also barbizon
Cafes One
of the most characteristic and
significant featuresof Parisian social life in the
19th c, they played an important role in society
at all levels. They commenced proliferating in
the 1 growth in their numbers stimu-
850s, the
lated by Baron Haussmann's rebuilding of the
Right Bank of paris under the Second Empire.
The spacious streets and boulevards allowed the
development of one of their most familiar
features, the terrasse, with its indication to the
passing world of the nature of the cafe's
clientele, its outward-looking character (as
Renoir, Sisley, Le Coeur and possibly Pissarro in opposed to the inward-looking quality of the
the Cabaret de la Mere Anthony, 1866. English pub) and its invitingness.
37
Cafes
38
Cafes-concert
39
Caillebotte, Gustave
Caillebotte's The Floor Strippers of 1875 was probably painted in the family home in the Batignolles area.
It is typical of his taste for unusual perspectives and scenes from modern life.
40
Carolus-Duran, Emile-Auguste
renoir started discussing the idea of a group M. Berhaut, Caillebotte; sa vie et son oeuvre
exhibition. Yet he did more than almost (1978), 'Le legs Caillebotte; Verites et contre-
anybody else to foster and support the move- verites', in Bulletin de la Societe de I'histoire de
ment, affording its members financial help by I'art francais (1983); J. K.T. Varnedoe, Gustave
buying their paintings at artificially elevated Caillebotte (1987)
prices, by making direct gifts of money, and by
such devices as buying his own paintings at the Callias, Nina de (1844-84) The estranged wife
auction held in 1877 to raise funds for future of the editor of Figaro, Nina de Callias {nee
exhibitions. Wealthy, and gifted in many ways, Marie-Anne was also known as Nina
Gaillard)
he was an enthusiastic gardener, communicat- de Villard. Pianist, composer and poet, she
ing his enthusiasm to Monet, and also the presided over one of the most spectacular and
designer of a series of racing yachts, some of exotic salons in Paris at 82 rue des Moines.
which were adorned with fanciful silk sails. He Amongst her regular guests were mallarme,
contributed greatly to the success of the various Anatole France, Verlaine, Cesar Franck and
impressionist exhibitions, not only financially, manet, who painted a portrait of her (1873-74;
but by his powers of organization and Musee d'Orsay) reclining against a background
diplomacy. of oriental fans. Famous for the vigour of her
Initially his own paintings were close to those sexual life, her fondness for alcohol and her
of Degas, but they were marked by an even alternating moods of hilarity and depression,
stronger preference for unposed gestures and she came to an early end. [224]
unusual viewpoints, exemplified at their most Dictionnaire de biographie francaise; A. Tabar-
dazzling in the remarkable painting Pont de ant, Manet et ses oeuvres (1947); K. Adler, Manet
V Europe (1876; Musee du Petit Palais, Geneva), (1986)
with its startling perspective and sense of
photographic immediacy. Even in so straight- Cals, Adolphe-Felix (1810-80) Trained
forward a picture as the Partie de bateau of 1877 initially asan engraver, he secured admission to
(Private collection), his close-up image of the the ecole des beaux-arts, where he worked
oarsman in his top hat is entirely unexpected. under Leon Cogniet, a great believer in the
Caillebotte was very much preoccupied with value of the freely painted sketch. Choosing
urban vistas, which he always perceived in a peasant life and landscape as his themes, he came
very individual way, usually depicting them into contact with boudin and jongkind,
from some elevated viewpoint. mainly through honfleur as a
his liking for
Caillebotte's reputation as a painter has been painting ground. Through them he met monet
largely overshadowed by his controversial and other Impressionists, with whose ideas he
legacy to the French nation of his remarkable largely concurred, and he took part in four of
collection of paintings by his fellow Impressio- their exhibitions, being the oldest participator.
nists. Rightly prescient of an early death, he He died in Honfleur, and there are several of his
drew up a will in 1876, in which, after making works in the museum there, as well as in the
provision for financing the next Impressionist Louvre, and at Rheims.
exhibition, he left his collection of paintings to A. Alexandre, A.F. Cals, ou le bonheur de
the nation, with the proviso that they be shown peindre (1900); E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des
first in the Luxembourg and eventually in the peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs (1966)
Louvre. When he died, 18 years later, this
collection consisted of 3 Manets, 16 Monets, 8 Carolus-Duran, Emile-Auguste (1838
Renoirs, 13 Pissarros, 7 Degas, 8 Sisleys, 5 1917) was to many Impressionists, especially
Cezannes, and his own Floor Strippers of 1875 degas, the very epitome of the successful
(Musee d'Orsay). Renoir was named as execu- society artistwho had abandoned his early
tor. After a good deal of delays, caused rather idealism.At the beginning of his career, Caro-
by bureaucratic inefficiency than ill-will, the lus-Duran was very close to manet, with whose
bequest was accepted, and formed the core of early style his own had some affinities,
thejeu de Paume collection; most of the works especially in its debt to Velazquez and other
have now been transferred to the Musee Spanish artists. In fact, George moore said that
d'Orsay. See argenteuil, batignolles,
also Manet was in despair at not being able to paint
CAFES, PATRONS AND COLLECTORS, PHOTO- portraits like his. A skilled portrait painter as
GRAPHY, REALISM, SOCIAL BACKGROUND [24, l6o] well as a sculptor, he was co-founder with
4i
Cassatt, Mary
Meissonier and puvis de chavannes of the financial help and by promoting the works of
Societe Nationale des Beaux-Arts, and in 1905 Impressionists in the USA, largely through her
became director of the French School in Rome. brother Alexander. By persuading him to buy
of monet (Musee
In 1867 he painted a portrait works by manet, monet, morisot, renoir,
Marmottan) and in 1877 produced an etching Degas and pissarro, she made him the first
of Manet. He was one of the main contributors important collector of such works in America.
to the fund that monet organized to buy She also advised and encouraged her friends the
Manet's Olympia for the nation. See also havemeyers to build up their important collec-
SARGENT tion of works by Impressionists and other
contemporary French artists.
Cassatt, Mary 844-1926) The daughter of an
(1 Her own works, on the occasions when they
affluent Pittsburgh businessman, whose French were shown in various mixed exhibitions in the
ancestry had endowed him with a passion for USA, were very favourably received by the
that country, she studied art at the Pennsylvania critics and contributed not a little to the
Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia, and then acceptance of Impressionism there. Despite her
travelled extensively in Europe, finally settling admiration for Degas, she was no slavish
in Paris in 1874. In that year she had a work imitator of his style, retaining her own very
accepted salon and in 1877 made the
at the personal idiom throughout her career. From
acquaintance of degas, with whom she was to him, and other Impressionists, she acquired an
be on close terms throughout his life. His art interest in the rehabilitation of the pictorial
and ideas had a considerable influence on her qualities of everyday life, inclining towards the
own work; he introduced her to the Imp- domestic and the intimate rather than the social
ressionists and she participated in the exhibi- and the urban (Lady at the Teatable, 1885;
tions of 1879, 1880, 1 88 1 and 1886, refusing to Metropolitan Museum, New York), with a
do so in 1882 when Degas did not. special emphasis on the mother and child theme
She was a great practical support to the in the 1890s (The Bath, 1891; Art Institute of
movement as a whole, both by providing direct Chicago). She also derived from Degas and
Cezanne, Paul
43
Cezanne, Paul
Cezanne starting out on an open-air painting significant that it appealed at a very early stage
expedition in Auvers, c. 1874. to those artists who themselves found the
'looseness' of Impressionism so unsatisfying. In
at Saint-Ouen near pontoise. Inevitably he 1883 signac bought one of Cezanne's works
took part in the first impressionist exhibition and in the following year gauguin purchased
and in that of 1877. Reactions to his work were two. He was a welcome exhibitor with Les
mixed, even among his friends, manet said to Vingt in Brussels (see Belgium) and (despite the
guillemet, one of Cezanne's most fervent disapproval of the Kaiser) his works were well
admirers, 'How can you abide such foul received in Berlin. In 1897 the astute vollard
painting?'; and even Zola, who dedicated Mori bought up the contents of a studio at Corbeil
Salon to him in 1866, drew a very clear line which Cezanne had abandoned, and the artist's
between affection for Cezanne as a man, and his
reactions to him as a painter. This distinction
became painfully apparent in L'Oeuvre, pub-
lished in 1886, which contained a character,
obviously based on Cezanne, who was depicted
and
as a frustrated artistic failure; this led to a
complete break between the two.
The image which Cezanne projected of a
farouche, uncultured, aggressive peasant
attracted attention and something of a cult
following amongst the habitues of such places
as the Cafe Guerbois - but it had little
foundation in fact. Julie Manet's reactions on
first meeting him in a hotel in giverny (they
44
Cezanne, Paul
Cezanne's Mont Sainte-Victoire (1886-88) is one of many versions he painted of the same scene. It
was given by the artist to Joachim Gasquet, and bought by Samuel Courtauld in 1925.
name started to appear in all the leading were geometrical ones - 'treating nature', in his
Symbolist magazines. A kind of contemporary own words, 'interms of the cylinder, the sphere
apotheosis came in 1901 when Maurice denis and the cone'. To achieve this simple-seeming,
(who had never met him) exhibited at the but actually very complex and sophisticated,
salon a large painting, Hommage a Cezanne syntax of expression, he returned time and time
(Musee d'Orsay), which included amongst his again to similar themes, in oils, drawings and
devotees Bonnard, Redon, Vuillard, Vollard watercolours - card players, the mountain of
and Denis himself. Significantly, the work was Sainte Victoire, just outside Aix, and still lifes,
bought by the current white hope of French which in his hands attained the kind of classic
literature, Andre Gide. monumentality that had previously only been
Cezanne himself would probably have pre- achieved by Chardin (e.g. the watercolour Still
ferred the Legion of Honour, for he had a child- Life with Apples, a Bottle and a Milk Pot, 1902;
like craving for official recognition, and a Dallas Museum of Art).
passion to escape from the imaginary oppro- For the English-speaking world, any under-
brium of being a rich dilettante. It was his ideal standing of the work of Cezanne is complicated
of achieving a blend of freedom and control, by the extent to which it became involved in
and evolving a new visual grammar, that made the art polemics of the first half of the 20th c,
him probably the most influential figure in the when writers such as Roger Fry and Clive Bell
development of 20th-c. painting, the forbear of used his works as the basis of an apologia for
Cubism, and much else besides. Treating his post-impressionism; their emphasis on 'plasti-
figures like still lifes (e.g. The Card Players, city' and similar ideological notions Bell said
1 891; Metropolitan Museum, New York), he that Cezanne was 'the Christopher Columbus
developed remarkable techniques for rendering of a whole new continent of form' has
space and three-dimensional qualities by pre- detracted from the real nature of his work. It is
senting different angles of vision, articulating true that he was a precursor; it is true that he
planes and harmonies of colour, and by pushed Impressionism into new and adventur-
approaching pictorial problems as though they ous paths - so, too, did seurat and Signac. But
4>
Champfleury, Jules Husson
Le A
CHAMPFLEURY Charivari, satirical magazine founded
1832 by an enterprising republican journalist,
in
46
Chatou
Madame Charpentier and her children Paul (at her knee) and Georgette,
painted by Renoir in 1878. Proust compared it with 'Titian at his best'.
versus Louis Philippe (1952); C. Bellanger et al., public. Proust described the painting at some
Histoire generale de la presse franqaise, vol. 2 length in Le Temps retrouve in a way that
(1969); Zeldin (1973) demonstrates both his visual sensibility and his
snobbery. One of the most valuable things that
Charpentier, Georges (1846 1905) At the age the Charpentiers did, primarily for Renoir, but
of 25 he inherited a successful publishing house, to a lesser extent for the other Impressionists,
the reputation of which he further enhanced, was to introduce them into a stratum of society
not only by his shrewd business acumen, but by likely to afford them patronage and support.
his ability to pick successful authors, amongst See also patrons and collectors, portraiture
whom are to be included Flaubert, zola, M. Florisoone, 'Renoir et la famille Charpen-
Maupassant, daudet and the goncourts. In tier', in L' Amour de I 'art (Feb. 1938); M.
1872 he married Marguerite Lemonnier (1848 Robida, Le Salon Charpentier et les impression-
1904), who reinforced the interest in art that he nistes (1958)
had inherited from his father, Gervais - a
supporter of the Romantics. The Charpentiers Chatou A small village on the banks of the
lived first in the Place Saint-Germain-l'Auxer- Seine, greatly used by Parisians for weekend
rois and later at 1 1 rue de Grenelle, and Madame excursions, and one of the places about which it
Charpentier's salon became famous as a meet- was said 'wherever there was a wretched square
ing place for writers, artists and left-wing of grass with half a dozen rachitic trees, there
politicians. Both of them were enthusiastic the proprietor made haste to establish a ball or a
patrons and supporters of the Impressionists, cafe-restaurant' (V. Fournel, Paris dans sa
and it was largely on their behalf that they splendeur, 1867). renoir worked there between
founded the magazine la vie moderne and ran 1879 and 1 88 1, and a small island facing the
an art gallery on its premises. They were village provided the scene for his Dejeuner des
particularly close to renoir, and
in 1878 he canotiers(1881; Phillips Collection, Wash-
painted the portrait of Madame
Charpentier ington, D.C.) and Oarsmen at Chatou (1879;
with her two children (Metropolitan Museum, National Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C).
New York) which, when it was exhibited at the monet also painted there in the late 1860s. See
salon in the following year, enhanced the also la grenouillere, restaurant fournaise
painter's reputation amongst the general [162]
4-
Chennevieres-Pointel, Charles-Philippe
francais (1853). See also salon des refuses Rood, Professor Rood's Theories on Colour and
Dictionnaire de biographie francaise Impressionism (1906); P. Signac, D' Eugene
Delacroix au neo-impressionnisme (1899)
Chesneau, Ernest (1833-98) An and
active
assiduous art critic who played an important
part in the French art world of the Second
Empire - he was Inspector of Fine Arts from Colour
1869 - partly through his friendship with (See entry on p. 59)
nieuwerkerke. A friend and admirer of John The Impressionists' most innovative and enduring
Ruskin, he was deeply concerned with the achievement lies above all else in their use of colour.
This was influenced by several factors: scientific
relationship between art and society, and pub-
investigations into the nature of perception and the
lished various books on this theme. He was one
qualities of light and colour by Bunsen and
of the first to recognize the merits of manet, and Kirchoff, Chevreul and Rood; the invention of
immediately picked up the connection between new artificial pigments, which broadened the
the Dejeuner sur I'herhe (1863; Musee d'Orsay) available palette range; the increasing vogue for
and Raphael. Initially hostile to the Impression- working en pleiti air, which replaced the subdued
ists, he later modified his hostility and built up a tone of studio paintings with more intense, light-
close relationship with Manet. See also salon suffused hues; and perhaps even the cultural shock
Hamilton (1954); Boime (1986) of exposure to the bright colours of oriental art.
4^
The reflective and refractive properties of water made it Overleaf: In his Gare Saint-Lazare series of 187678
the perfect vehicle for the Impressionists' interest in light Monet created powerful images of Paris in the age of
and colour. In Renoir's The Seine at Asnieres the Industrial Revolution. Yet his central preoccupation
(c. iSjg) the traditional academic concern with line, in these works was not the subject-matter, but the
perspective and chiaroscuro shading is completely challenge of capturing on canvas the elusive effects of
abandoned in an attempt to capture the sensation of amorphous steam-clouds rising into the station vault.
open-air perception. Shadows, earth colours and black Inspired partly by Chevreul's investigations into the
are banished in favour of pure, prismatic hues and an properties of colour, Monet studied how colour and
extensive use of white. Rather than being applied in a light are affected by moisture in the air, and, especially,
of thin, superimposed layers, in the conventional
series how the effect of a colour varies according to its
manner, opaque paint is applied directly with a loaded context. Exploiting his restricted palette of twelve
brush to create a more immediate effect. The vibrant colours to the full, he creates a series of subtle
contrast of the complementary colours orange and blue modulations across the canvas, playing blue against
provides the central focus of the image, the rich orange white, against purple-black, and against pinkish grey;
of the boat's reflection almost overpowering the blue of the dark body of the engine in the centre stands out
the river. Where pure colours are applied wet in wet sharply against the white of steam and daylight, but this
with repeated short brushstrokes - as in the foreground is counterbalanced by the play of white steam against
reflections - they mingle to create optical mixtures, dark roof in the top right-hand corner. These dispersed
while in the distance a soft haze is created by scrubbing touches of white, blue and red, the balancing of light
colour wet over dry with a stiff brush. The variety of and dark areas, tie the image together visually, and the
Renoir's brushwork enlivens the paint surface, evoking relatively austere useof colour is animated by the
a vivid sense of shimmering sunlight and summer heat, spontaneity of the brushwork. The bold strokes that
while the puff of smoke from a train on the horizon economically delineate the station structure contrast
adds a touch of modern life to the rustic scene, and vividly with the broken, almost scribbled handling of
mirrors the modernity of Renoir's technique. the steam. Though partly the result of Monet's need to
work rapidly, the brushmarks aptly convey the sketchy,
insubstantial nature of the steam as against the emphatic
solidity of the machines.
mM
m*
Women in the Garden (1866-67) was Monet's first white dress of the woman in the foreground is dappled
radical gesture towards plein-air painting. He later said with blue reflected from the sky and with the tendency
of this period, 'I fell in love with the rayon [ray of perceive reality as a pattern of coloured
of the eye to
light] and the reflet [reflection J', and the image clearly patches. The influence of photography is also evident in
shows his fascination with coloured shadows - the the arbitrary, informal poses of the figures.
Renoir's desire to depict light as it is truly perceived led graduated tones of Salon paintings, in which light was
him, works as The Swing (1876), to create
in such firmly tied to the definition ofform, critics found
compositions in which pools of light and shade give the Renoir's technique disturbing: G. Vassy in
effect of an almost decorative curtain falling over the L'Evenement complained that the patches of light
blurred contours of his forms. Attuned to the carefully resembled 'spots of grease on the models' clothes'.
'
What does the frame, the motif, matter if the effect is In common with the Realist writers of the nineteenth
varied?': one of the Impressionists' greatest century, painters longed to discover a precise method of
achievements was to show how, once liberated from creating an accurate representation of reality - a quasi-
form, light and colour could be studied for their own scientific system that would lend greater credibility to
sake, as independent elements within a painting. These their opposition to the long-established conventions of
concerns found their purest expression in Monet's the academic tradition. When Pissarro met Seurat and
'series' pictures of the i8gos, in which a single, static Signac in 1883, he was powerfully convinced by their
motif- haystacks or poplars - acted as a focus for the experimental Divisionist theories of painting describing
,
ever-changing effects of light and atmosphere. Based on their approach as 'a modern synthesis by methods based
relatively simple colour contrasts, the Rouen cathedral on science'. The technique was essentially derived from
compositions chart the play of sunlight from ,
dawn to the discovery that light can be divided into its
dusk, over the neutral grey stone of the Gothic constituent prismatic parts, and it was believed that by
structure; Rouen cathedral: sunset (1894), for applying tiny, regular strokes of pure hues, which
example, sets a warm, burnt orange against a cool grey- would blend in the eye of the viewer rather than being
blue. The underlying pattern of the facade and the mixed on the palette, the artist would be able to create a
tangible atmospheric enveloppe provide an overall more convincing reflection of the nature of perception.
unity to the image, in which solid forms threaten to Pissarro' s Femme dans un clos (1887), painted at
disintegrate beneath Monet's almost expressionistic Eragny, indeed conveys vividly the sense of dazzling
impasto brushwork. The use of non-descriptive colour midday heat and light, the uniform dabs of sharp lime
and brushstrokes seems to point towards the green, bright blue and warm yellow dissolving the
development of a purely abstract art, but Monet's aim outlines of the forms.
in these works was still to represent the essence of
57
Claretie, Jules
Clemenceau, as seen by Manet, 1879. The Degas, Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition cata-
portrait did not appeal to the politician. logue (i<
58
Coloi
Colour It was in their use of colour that the monet was especially active in this respect. In
Impressionists made most significant con-
their the Gare Saint-Lazare (1877, National Gallery),
tribution to the development of Western art, it would seem that he used a certain
for instance,
and one which, by destroying old concepts of amount of black to darken the shadows,
colour as a merely descriptive adjunct to form, especially in the intense blackness of the engine.
was to allow it to be used for a variety of A recent analysis, carried out by the scientific
independent purposes. Originally, their staffof the National Gallery, however, reveals
approach had been influenced by the discover- that this is not the case. The dark colour is made
ies of chevreul, especially that relating to up of a dark purple, laid on side by side with an
simultaneous contrast, which pointed out that if intense deep blue. In the roof of the station the
two strips of the same plain colour, but of shadows are depicted by the same combination,
different shades, are placed side by side, then the with the warmer colour predominating to the
part of the lighter strip nearer the darker strip right, the cooler to the left. At the other end of
will appear lighter than it actually is, and vice the chromatic scale the steam and smoke are
versa. Similarly, Chevreul demonstrated how painted mainly in lead white, tinted with small
every colour tends to tint neighbouring colours quantities of blue, green and red pigment.
with its own complementary colour. In terms A similar analysis of Renoir's The Seine at
of the awareness of the spectator, he described Asnieres (1879) in the same gallery, shows the
the first phenomenon as mixed contrast, the Impressionist palette at its most typical - and
second as successive contrast. most complex. In painting this work Renoir
Preoccupied as they were with depicting used the following colours: lead white, cobalt
actual visual experience in a perceptual rather blue, chrome yellow, lemon yellow, chrome
than a conceptual way, the Impressionists seized orange, vermilion and crimson lake, which he
upon these notions, of which they had already applied in unmixed dabs, sometimes over quite
become at least partially aware through their a large area. The only mixing of colours occurs
own observations, but modified them accord- where one pigment is introduced to make some
ing to their own sensibilities. Above all else they minor change to the dominant one (e.g. the use
were excited by the idea that colour was not a of a tiny amount of viridian to modify the
fixed and isolated constituent, its nature prede- colour of the foliage, which is predominantly
termined by the label on the tube from which it yellowish-green). As the picture was painted
emerged. As Jacques Lassaigne put it wet in wet, the brushstrokes merge and patches
(Impressionism, 1969), 'Henceforward Impres- of colour intermingle with the streaks left by
sionism was able to go beyond the accepted the brush. However, the actual creation of
conventions of studio painting, contrived light- colour takes place in the eye of the spectator
ing and the rest. It could suggest shapes and rather than on the artist's palette. Though
distances by vibrations and colour contrasts, Renoir has mixed thin paint for the back-
considering the subject matter in its luminous ground to produce softer, more graduated
atmosphere and in the changes of lighting. A tones, the major part of the picture surface is
landscape bathed in light is made up of a covered with thick brushstrokes applied in
thousand vibrant clashes, of prismatic superimposed strokes of pure colour.
decompositions, of irregular strokes, which In emancipating colour from its purely
from a distance meld with one another to create descriptive functions, even though originally
life.' Colour had become an independent ele- they had been endeavouring to achieve a higher
ment in the creation of a work of art, capable degree of objective realism, the Impressionists
not only of performing compositional tasks, had initiated a revolution in art, which would
but of adumbrating emotion and feeling. lead through gauguin and van gogh to the
No single formula can be devised to define figurative Expressionism of painters such as
the actual use of colourby all the Impressionists. Ensor and the Blaue Reiter, to the Abstract
With some were considerable variations
there Expressionism of Pollock and the New York
within the course of their careers, renoir's early School, and eventually to the single colour
works had a greenish-blue tonality, his later paintings of Rothko. Feeling had asserted its
ones a vibrant red-tinted accent. But all of primacy over form, and through colour the
them, with the possible exception of degas, visual realism of the Impressionists led to the
gave a great deal of time and effort to producing last renaissance of Romanticism. See also flo-
colour effects of great technical complexity. CHETAGE, PEINTURE CLAIRE, TECHNIQUE [49-56]
59
Cordey, Frederic
A. Callcn, Techniques of the Impressionists depended very much on making his students
(1982); A. Roy, 'The Palettes of Impressionist copy pictures from the Louvre, and Van Gogh
Paintings in the National Gallery', National was totally disillusioned by his experience with
Gallery Technical Bulletin, vol. 9 (1985) him. Inevitably Cormon became a favourite
butt of the main-line Impressionists, who saw in
Cordey, Frederic (1 854-191 1) A rather undis- him the very epitome of the reactionary
tinguished painter who, having with a group of academic artist. In fact this was not true. He
friends left the ecole des beaux-arts in a mood was especially impressed by the work of
of revolt against its teachings, met renoir - Toulouse-Lautrec, who reported home in 1883
then living in montmartre - and became a that Cormon had approved of some works of
virtual disciple. Thanks to this contact, he his 'of ahighly Impressionistic bent', and a year
exhibited four works at the 1877 impressionist later he invited the young artist to assist him in
exhibition. In 1 88 1 he was in Algiers with illustrating the Imprimerie Nationale edition of
Renoir, but his painting career never made any the works of Victor Hugo, though the work
headway and he lapsed into a kind of modified Lautrec did for La Legende des siecles was not
academicism. actually used. [21]
Rewald (1973); B.E. White, Renoir, His Life, J. Rewald, Post-Impressionism (1956); Rewald
Art and Letters (1984) (1973); Milner (1988)
Cormon, Fernand (1845 1924) Professor of Corot, Camille (1796 1875) No painter of his
painting ecole des beaux-arts, he had
at the generation had a greater influence on the
first achieved wide fame in 1880 with his Cain Impressionists, in whose activities and experi-
(Musee du Luxembourg), which was the sensa- ments he took a lively interest; he offered advice
tion of the salon of that year. Known for his and counsel to pissarro, morisot and others,
portraits as well as his history paintings, he ran who responded warmly not only to his artistic
an atelier and counted amongst his pupils achievements, but to his obvious integrity and
gauguin, van gogh, Toulouse-Lautrec and generosity of spirit. The son of a Norman
Emile Bernard. Cormon's teaching methods textile merchant, he started his career in his
A corner of Cormon's studio, showing sketches A photograph of Corot on abrochure for the
for his famous 'stone-age' paintings. 'Fete de Corot' held at Ville d'Avray in 1903.
60
Corot, Camille
The Cart; Souvenir de Marcoussis, 1865: Corot's exact study of light and landscape was to have ;reat impact
on the Impressionists, but his lyrical vision also appealed to more conservative tastes.
father's firm, but the strength of his desire to The Belfry at Douai, 1870; both in the Musee
become an artist persuaded his family to allow d'Orsay). He also visited Italy again, painting
him to become a student ofJean-Victor Bertin, views of Venice and elsewhere {The Grand
who gave him a neo-classical training. Despite Canal and S. Maria della Salute, Pushkin
this academic background, he felt drawn to Museum of Fine Arts, Moscow). Corot gra-
landscape painting and spent most of his spare dually became widely recognized; baudelaire
time in the forest of Fontainebleau, on the banks wrote in praise of him, and napoleon hi bought
of the Seine and on the Channel coast. one of his works, Souvenir de Marcoussis (1865;
His first stay in italy between 1825 and 1828 Musee d'Orsay) for his private collection. He
had a decisive influence on his development. He served on the jury of the salon from 1864 and
was entranced by its light, and found in its always had his pictures accepted there.
landscape a source of inspiration which looked Pissarro had been in close contact with Corot
back towards the tradition of Claude and since the commencement of his career as a
Poussin, renovated by a sense of lyricism that painter, and most of his early work shows
found nourishment in the bucolic poetry of Corot's influence quite strongly; indeed, when
Virgil, to which he was passionately devoted. he sent two pictures to the Salon in 1864 he
On his return to France he continued to paint described himself as 'the pupil of A. Melbye and
those landscapes that had previously attracted Corot'. Paradoxically, the one and only piece of
him, but he greatly extended his areas of advice that Corot ever gave to anybody was not
interest, visiting Burgundy, the Auvergne and to imitate others, though to Pissarro he added
the Morvan. He was indeed one of the most the rider 'Except for this; above all else study
peripatetic painters of his age, covering most of tonal values. We don't see in the same way; you
the French provinces (e.g. Chartres, 1830, and see green, and I see grey and silver. But this is no
6i
Courbet, Gustave
Commonly known as The Artist's Studio, Courbets enormous painting, which includes portraits of
Baudelaire, Champfleury and Bruyas, was exhibited in 1855 in the 'Pavilion du Realisme' near the Salon.
reason at all for you not to work at values, for to fulfil his long-held desire to become an artist,
that is the basis of everything, and in whatever and was seduced by the painters of Spain, whose
way one may feel and express oneself, one works were then becoming so accessible. Escap-
cannot do good painting without it.' renoir ing from the initial appeal of Romanticism, he
and monet were equally impressed by Corot's became the accepted leader of the realist
work, though the former held back from group, a position confirmed by the two works
personal contact, largely out of shyness, giving which he exhibited at the salon of 1850: The
as his reason the fact that Corot was 'always Stone Breakers and The Burial at Ornans (Musee
surrounded by idiots'. It was probably the d'Orsay). One of the main beliefs which
charm of Berthe morisot that impelled Corot actuated him was that, in his own words,
to a closer relationship with her and her sister 'Painting is an art of sight and should therefore
Edma, with whom he frequently dined, but to concern itself with things seen; it should eschew
whom he also gave the advice not to copy 'papa both the historical scenes of the classical school,
Corot'. As he grew older his own work tended and poetic subjects chosen from Goethe and
to come closer to the explorations of the Shakespeare of the kind chosen by the Roman-
habitues of the cafe guerbois, and paintings tics.' He saw in the events of ordinary life an
such as his Sens Cathedral (1874; Musee d'Orsay) encounter by the roadside, peasants winnowing
show how great was the debt they owed him. grain or girls sleeping, far from gracefully, in
See also antecedents, auvers-sur-oise, chin- the grass - themes in themselves worthy of
TREUIL, IMPRESSIONISM, VILLE d'AVRAY [204] being recorded without the addition of any
E. Moreau-Nelaton, Corot, raconte par lui- intellectual or sentimental gloss. In some ways
meme (1924); J. Leymarie, Corot (1962); Corot, his work combined the clear-eyed gravity of
Orangerie, Paris, exhibition catalogue (1975) the Spanish painters with the ability of their
Dutch and Flemish contemporaries to record
Courbet, Gustave (1819-77) Born into a the actualities of daily existence.
family of rich vine-growers, his early years in Such an approach was very much in the air. It
Ornans (Franche-Comte) gave him a life-long was to be seen in the works of English painters,
devotion to that area, from which he drew such as Luke Fildes and Ford Madox Brown; in
much of his material. In 1839 he went to Paris the writings of zola and the goncourts, and in
62
Courbet, Gustave
a mildly sentimentalized form in the paintings to reject the offer of the Legion of Honour.
of contemporary artists such as millet. But it With the of the Second Empire he became
fall
implied a new attitude to the social dimensions involved in the Commune, and was made
of life and their political implications. What virtually its Minister of Fine Arts. When the
differentiated Courbet from most others who government forces retook Paris, he was held
shared his aesthetic ideals was the fact that, by responsible for the destruction of the Vendome
the almost physical force of his personality, and column, and briefly put into prison, where he
by his deeply held political convictions as a continued painting and was visited by monet,
socialist he was a friend and disciple of Pierre boudin and Amand Gautier. He was con-
Joseph Proudhon - which were thrown into demned to pay personally for the restoration of
relief by the nature of the political regime then the column and, probably with the connivance
operating in France, he became a symbolic of the authorities, fled to Switzerland, where he
figure, who epitomized the artist as rebel died in 1877.
against both the artistic and the political estab- Apart from the fact that Courbet provided
lishment. He therefore helped to create the the Impressionists with a notion of contempor-
climate of opinion and the entrenched attitudes ary realism and served as a prototype of the
that were to mark the emergence of artist as innovator in conflict with traditiona-
Impressionism. lism, he exerted, especially in the 1860s, a
Courbet's paintings anticipated the icono- stylistic influence which, although it was later
graphy of the Impressionists in that they were melded with their own individual develop-
unheroic, unhistorical and entirely uncon- ments and experiments, would always be
cerned either with religious symbolism or perceptible in their work in the form of a
patriotic propaganda. They rejected, in fact,
nearly all the themes that had exercised most
French painters during the previous century,
and qualified him for the description which
Baudelaire, one of his admirers, applied to SOUYEMRSde la commune
guys: 'a painter of modern life'. One of the first -?"
i 1
commencer
scenes, with which he had a considerable j>ar etre casseur de pierres.
63
Couture, Thomas
freedom of handling, a sense of surface vibrancy Until 1870 manet and Courbet were thought
and a boldness of composition. Even the by many to be rivals for the leadership of a new
somewhat austere visual effect of degas suc- movement in painting. A variety of factors, not
cumbed to the older artist's self-confidence, all of them connected with the older painter's
notably in Mile Fiocre in the Ballet 'La Source' misfortunes, decided otherwise, but traces of
(1867; Brooklyn Museum, New York), in the legacy of the master of Ornans persisted into
which the rocks of the stage-set take on the the beginnings of the 20th c. See also bonvin,
textured solidity of one of Courbet's quarry BRASSERIE DES MARTYRS, BRUYAS, CAFES, CAS-
paintings. Monet's work, until at least 1869, TAGNARY, ETRETAT, POLITICS [ j6 ljl 204] , ,
was dominated by the influence of Courbet, P. Courthion, Courbet raconte par lui et par ses
with whom he was in clost contact; and amis. 2 vols. (1948, 1950); G. Mack, Gustave
cezanne, who praised his 'unlimited talent, for Courbet (195 1); Clark (1973b)
which no difficulties exist', found in his realism
an antidote to the rather baroque fantasies that Couture, Thomas (1815-79) A history and
were preoccupying him. pissarro's The Hermi- portrait who first achieved renown
painter
tage at Pontoise (c.1867; Guggenheim Museum, with his Romains de la decadence (1847; Musee
New York) treatment of trees and
typifies in its d'Orsay). He was a highly successful teacher, his
foliage, its high sloping horizon, its handling of most famous pupil being manet, of whom he
the stone and tiles of the cottages, and in the said that he would be no more than the
breadth of its composition, the kind of hold that Daumier of his generation. He was also the
Courbet's work had on artists of that gener- teacher of puvis de chavannes, the Americans
ation, renoir's figures of women reflect the W.M. Hunt and John La Farge, and the
Demoiselles an bord de la Seine (1856; Ville de German Anselm Feuerbach. He wrote two
Paris);Monet's paintings at Etretat echo Cour- interesting books on painting, one devoted to
bet's the same place; sisley's View of
at techniques and practice, the other to landscape.
Montmartre (1869; Musee de Grenoble) has the Although he was, and often still is, taken as the
breadth of handling and of concept that Cour- prototype of the unimaginative academic
bet had made seem so enviable to his admirers. painter, in fact he laid strong emphasis on
The combination of academic realism and French eroticism which characterizes Couture's Romains de /.;
64
Critics and criticism
by about 2000 artists, attracted visitors whose 1883 Monet noted 'Nothing can be achieved
numbers rose from some 1 50,000 in the 1 840s to today without the press. It is not so much that
562,000 in 1887. Nearly a million visited the artistically one should pay attention to it. It is
of the Exposition Universelle of
fine art section the commercial aspect which counts, for even
1855. There was therefore a vast potential intelligent connoisseurs are sensitive to the least
market for writings about art, which was noise made by the press.' This, of course, was
catered for by a wide range of papers and true, though it is not always easy to decide to
periodicals; popular newspapers, such as Figaro what extent critics made taste or followed it.
65
Critics and criticism
Eugene Fromentin, who, whilst criticizing huysmans, whose aesthetic sensibilities were
them for their lack of 'science', admitted that moulded by lauded degas, as
his literary tastes,
they possessed 'keenly observed powers of well as such artists asforain and raffaelli,
observation, delicate sensibilities and the most largely because of their realism, and deprecated
exceptional faculties'. Paul mantz, a renowned the works of Monet and Pissarro. Only in
art historian and editor of the Gazette des Beaux- England and the USA would critics continue to
Arts, spoke in its columns in 1878 of the praise or condemn Impressionism as a unitary
Impressionist as 'A free and sincere artist who, phenomenon. In 1888 Zola, who had acted as
breaking with the traditions of the Ecole des godfather to the movement, pronounced what
Beaux-Arts and the dictates of polite taste, he saw as its epitaph: 'The group's life is
experiences, in the simplicity of his heart, the finished. The great tragedy is that no single
absolute enchantment which is distilled by member of the group has ever managed to unite
nature and expresses simply and freely as
it as in his own work the entirety of that new
possible, in what might be described as the approach, elements of which are dispersed
intensity of the impression he has received.' By through all their paintings. They have not
1879, partly as a result of renoir's success at the produced a comprehensive genius.' See also
Salon, even the most hostile papers and maga- BAUDELAIRE, BESNARD, BLANC, BURGER, CAS-
zines, such as L' Artiste, had started to show TAGNARY, CHESNEAU, CLARETIE, DELVAU,
66
Dancing
D
Dancing In 1867 the American Henry Tucker-
man wrote about pares, 'Dancing there is a
function of life, a normal phase of national
development; it is what racing and boxing are Degas' painting (1873-76) of a dancing class at the
in Britain, and speechifying in the United Opera, conducted by choreographer Jules Perrot.
States. Balls in Paris are representative and share
the distinctions of society; the middle class, the
ruling powers and the fanatics of all ranks may husband was a bassoonist in the Opera orches-
find appropriate gyrations in their respective tra, and her two daughters, Suzanne and
spheres' (Papers about Paris, New York). It was Blanche, both of whom entered the ballet at the
just because of this intimate connection with the age of seven and had successful careers in ballet.
life and spirit of the times that the Impressionists Next on the scale came social dances; the
found in dancing one of their favourite themes. most popular were the masked balls held at the
At the top of the dancing hierarchy was the Opera every Saturday night from December
ballet at the Opera, which was housed in a until Shrove Tuesday, one of which was
building in the rue Le Peletier until 1875, when painted by manet in 187374 (National Gallery
it was moved into Charles Garnier's master- of Art, Washington). Admission cost ten francs,
piece. Employing as it did a staff of 650, the so these balls were not in any way 'select'; they
Opera was an integral part of the fashionable lasted from midnight until five in the morning
life of Paris, though artistically, it could not be
67
Daubigny, Charles Francois
and were considered happy hunting-grounds the kind of people who attended these bah.
for Casanovas, anxious to pick up a dancer or Toulouse-Lautrec was to continue this concern
member of the Opera chorus. with public entertainment, though his was a
Then came the bah publics, which visitors more sophisticated world. See also cafes-
found such an idiosyncratic aspect of Parisian CONCERT, MUSIC, PERROT [39, 40 159, 187] ,
life, and which varied in nature from the near- I. Guest, The Ballet of the Second Empire (1974);
orgiastic to events specially designed for family F. Gasnault, Guinguettes et lorettes, Bah publics et
relaxation. In1876 renoir started attending danse sociale a Paris entre 1830 et 1870 (1986);
dances at the Moulin de la Galette in mont- Herbert (1988)
martre, an area which at that time had not
achieved the cultural chic that it was later to Daubigny, Charles Francois (1817-78) The
assume. The actual moulin, one of three that pupil of his father Edme-Francois, he attended
gave the hill its characteristic profile, was used the studio of Paul Delaroche, went to Rome,
to grind iris roots for a perfumier, and the and on his return became a picture restorer at
dancing area was an enclosed courtyard, adjac- the Louvre. His own style of painting evolved
ent to a cafe owned by the Debray family. in the direction of the barbizon School
Renoir's Dance Moulin de la Galette (1876;
at the (although he did not live or work in that
Musee d'Orsay) not only conveys the atmos- locality)and he was an enthusiastic practitioner
phere of the place, but, by his selection of the of out-of-doors painting, very much concerned
participants - four painters, a civil servant, two with atmospheric effects. He first attracted
journalists, several models (one of whom also public attention and praise at the salon of 1848
features in The Swing of 1876; Musee d'Orsay), with a series of landscapes of the Morvan
and a host of ordinary people whom he asked to (Valley of the Cousin, Musee d'Orsay), and he
pose - gives a realistic picture of urban pleasures maintained his popularity, despite the fact that
in the Paris of his day. The women were not his brushwork became increasingly free and
prostitutes but working-class girls, who typify spontaneous. Although Dutch influence was
Daubigny's Evening clearly demonstrates the Dutch influence on his work and that interest in atmospheric
effects which so appealed to the Impressionists.
68
Degas, Edgar
evident in his works, as, indeed, was that of buyer at the otherwise disastrous hoschede sale
Constable, his style was never derivative, and it in 1878. See also batignolles
is obvious that his work would have appealed to
the younger generation of artists which was to Davies Collection Between 1908 and 1924
produce Impressionism. Margaret and Gwendoline Davies, the
From the begining, monet was one of his daughters of an affluent coal and railways
devoted admirers; the two first met at trou- contractor, amassed at Gregynog Hall, Mont-
ville in 1 865 and in 1 868 Daubigny was largely
, gomeryshire, in Wales, a collection of paintings
instrumental in getting works by Monet, as which, in its wealth of works by the Impressio-
well as by manet, pissarro, bazille, morisot, nists, rivalled that of Sir Hugh lane. They had
renoir and sisley, admitted to the Salon, in begun by collecting artists of the barbizon
which he was serving as a jury member. It was School, but by 19 12 they were moving on to
also Daubigny who first introduced Monet to monet, some of whose Venetian works they
his dealer Paul durand-ruel, in January 1871 had seen in Paris at an exhibition at Bernheim-
when they were all in London; who persuaded Jeune's gallery. They were advised in their
him to go to Holland in 1872; and who bought purchases by David Croal Thomson, who had
his Canal in Zaandam (Collection of Mr & Mrs worked for Henry Wallis, the English partner
Clifford, New York). It is not without interest, of durand-ruel. Their collection included 3
too, that Monet's famous floating studio, in manets, 3 renoirs, 2 paintings and 6 drawings
which he was painted by Manet (1874; Bayer- by pissarro, 9 paintings by Monet, 3 cezanne
ische Staatsgalerie, Munich), was based on a oils and 3 watercolours, 1 morisot, i sisley, and
similar botin that Daubigny, who was particu- two bronze statuettes by degas. The whole
larly attracted to river scenes, had used some collection was bequeathed to the National
two decades earlier. Museum of Wales. [54]
There can be doubt that of all the older
little J. Ingamells, The Davies Collection of French
artists who over the genesis of
presided Art (1966)
Impressionism, Daubigny was one of the most
helpful and, stylistically, one of the most Degas, Hilaire-Germain-Edgar (1834-
influential. See also antecedents, hotel 1917) The son of an upper middle-class banking
DROUOT, PLEIN-AIRISME [l68] family with aristocratic Neapolitan connec-
E. Moreau-Nelaton, Daubigny raconte par lui- tions, Degas early expressed a wish to become
meme (1925); M. Fidell-Beaufort and J. Bailly- an artist, and as this aroused no parental
Herzberg, Daubigny; the life and work (1975) opposition, he entered the ecole des beaux-
arts at the age of 21. After a year there,
Daudet, Alphonse (1840-97) Considered in however, he went to italy, staying first in
his day to be, with Maupassant, the leading Naples, before visiting other Italian cities, and
exponent of realism in literature, he was an eventually spending three years in Rome. By
extremely prolific and successful novelist, this time he had acquired a passion for Italian
playwright and journalist, whose novels dealt painting which was never to leave him and
with a wide range of subjects, from the home which was to give his paintings a clarity and
life of the Bonapartes and the history of the linear elegance that set him somewhat apart
Academie Francaise to the Salvation Army and from many of those with whom his own artistic
the country life of Provence. His most famous career would be associated. In Italy he painted a
works are the Lettres de mon moulin (1866) and number of portraits, mainly of his relations (see
Tartarin de Tarascon (1872). bellelli), in which he expressed for the first
Daudet's natural inclination to Realism and time his own attitude to portraiture: 'to depict
his social contacts led him into touch with the people in familiar and typical attitudes, above
Impressionists. His publisher charpentier was a all to give to their faces the same choice of
close friend and patron of renoir, who used to expression as one gives to their bodies'. Apart
visit Daudet at his home in Champrosey, and from he started producing what were, in
these,
his friendship with degas was reinforced by effect, 'academic' paintings of classical and
their common interest in the lives of ordinary historical subjects, dealt with in a style that had
people. He was a frequent visitor to the suggestions of Mantegna, of Bellini and of
Nouvelle-Athenes, bought several paintings Ingres. But even in the most traditional of these,
from the Impressionists and was a prominent there was a sense of realism and a clarity of
69
Degas, Edgar
70
Delacroix, Eugene
has to compose', he once said, and though most Notebooks of Edgar Degas, 2 vols. (1985);
of works suggest spontaneity, it was a
his Adriani (1985); Rewald (1985), Studies in Post-
spontaneity arrived at after a good deal of Impressionism (1986); Degas, Grand Palais, Paris,
preliminary work; his sketches and preliminary exhibition catalogue (1988)
drawings throw invaluable light on the whole
creative process. Delacroix, Ferdinand-Victor-Eugene
His concern with different media and his (1798 1863) The son of a Napoleonic general
constant technical explorations led him into a (or, according to some sources, a bastard of
wide variety of works. He was a dedicated Talleyrand), he entered the studio of Pierre
photographer, and relied on its productions for Guerin in 18 16, but relied more for his art
compositional devices, unusual viewpoints and education on copying old masters in the
'awkward' poses. Influenced by Japanese Louvre, being especially attracted by Rubens
prints, he also experimented with print-making and the Venetians. It was there that he met
himself- in which he had the help of pissarro Bonington and became interested in British art,
and cassatt - and explored various combi- an interest that was further stimulated by the
nations of watercolour and gouache, and, sight of Constable's Haywain (exhibited in the
increasingly as he became older, pastels. It was salon of 1824) and by a trip to England in
indeed in the series of large-scale pastels which 1825.
he produced from the 1890s onwards that he By this date he had already established a
came closest to what might be called 'main- reputation as the most advanced exponent of
stream Impressionism', using bold, simplified the Romantic approach to art; his first major
colours applied with a certain degree of work, Dante and Virgil in Hell (Louvre), had
abandon. received considerable critical acclaim when it
Leading a bachelor life, but greatly loved by was exhibited at the Salon of 1822, and was
his acquaintances and friends, Degas devoted bought by the State. Inevitably, he was cast in
his whole personal fortune to making good the the role of one of the protagonists in that
debts of the family business. He was violently struggle between the Classicists and the
anti-Dreyfus (see politics) and, indeed, anti- Romantics, which had first become evident in
Semitic; despite close professional links with the contrast between Poussin and Claude. His
Pissarro, he always referred to him as 'that work with its emphasis on colour rather than
Israelite' and yet, to quote a notorious phrase, on line, his whirling compositions with their
'some of his best friends were Jews' (see sense of barely suppressed passion, his choice of
halevy). His work was accepted more readily farouche subjects was diametrically opposed
and more quickly than that of most of his to the tradition which in his own time was
colleagues, especially by the English. This expressed by Ingres, who had inherited it from
popularity was no mere chance. Nobody had David: a preference for draughtsmanship and
succeeded as well as he in melding the new hard, clear outlines, and restrained, formalized
vitality that Impressionism had brought to art emotions.
with the precise disciplines and controlled Delacroix's sense of uninhibited colour and
emotions that had been part of the French his sensitivity to the exotic were further
pictorial tradition since at least the time of enhanced in 1832, when the Comte de Mornay
Poussin. On the other hand Degas was no timid took the painter with him on an official trip to
devotee of compromise. His sculpture is out- Algiers, Morocco and southern Spain. From
standingly innovative, and some of his later this Delacroix brought back seven albums of
pastels reach out to the chromatic and com- watercolours, drawings and sketches, which
positional fervours of Expressionism. See also were to provide the material for close on a
BARTHOLOME, CLOSIER, COURBET, DANCING, hundred paintings, such as The Sultan of
DOBIGNY, DRAWING, ENGLAND, FAURE, ILLUS- Morocco and his Entourage (1845; Musee des
TRATION, LECOQ DE BOISBAUDRAN, MARTELLI, Augustins, Toulouse) and Women of Algiers
MIRBEAU, MUSIC, PATRONS AND COLLECTORS, (1834; Louvre).
PERSPECTIVE, PHOTOGRAPHY, PRICES, PRINTS, In terms of the traditional stylistic phases of
ROUART, SOCIAL BACKGROUND, TILLOT, TISSOT, European art he was endeavouring to combine
VALERNES [17, 30 58,, 67, 74, 106, 11Q, 126, 128, the baroque with the classical, investing the
136, 149, 157, 158, 173, ig8, 212, 222, 223] combination with a contemporary sensibility
T. Reff, Degas; the artist's mind (1976), The that projected him into the role of one of the
7i
the Impressionists and, in a book he wrote
about paris, he gave an extensive account of the
meetings at the brasserie des martyrs.
A. Delvau, Histoire anecdotique des cafes et
cabarets de Paris (1862)
himself said 'I am a rebel, not a revolutionary', It included 46 sisleys, an important group by
and his influence on the Impressionists was renoir, including Summer (1868; Staatliche
profound and decisive. It can be seen at its most Museen Preussischer Kulturbesitz, Berlin) and
obvious in the works of renoir, but in a more Dance at Bougival (1882; Museum of Fine Arts,
pervasive sense his use of pure colour and of Boston), and works by monet, pissarro, Gau-
vibrating adjacent tones, his liberation of tech- guin and Toulouse-Lautrec. Not all his collec-
nique from the mechanical and the obsessive, tion was sold, however; he gave some import-
helped to create the kind of atmosphere which ant works to the museum at Rouen, and after
made the development of Impressionism poss- his death a large number of paintings by
ible. In 1854 manet, accompanied by Antonin guillaumin belonging to him came on the
proust, went to Delacroix's studio in the rue market. See also patrons and collectors
Furstenberg to ask permission to copy his Dante S. Monneret, LTmpressionnisme et son epoque,
and Virgil in Hell; it was a significant moment in vol. 2 (1979); Renoir, Hayward Gallery, Lon-
the history of art. See also antecedents, don, exhibition catalogue (1985)
FLOCHETAGE, IMPRESSIONISM, PHOTOGRAPHY [23]
E. Delacroix, Correspondance generate, ed. A. Desboutin, Marcellin (1 823-1902) Painter,
Joubin, 5 vols. (1936-38); H. Wellington (ed.), engraver and author - he had a play put on by
The Journal of Eugene Delacroix (1980); L. the Theatre Francais - he originally studied law
Johnson, The Paintings of Eugene Delacroix, a but then took up painting and attended the
critical catalogue, 2 vols. (1981) ecole des beaux-arts. An indefatigable, pro-
fessionalBohemian, he was of putative aristoc-
Delvau, Alfred (1825-67) Writer and art ratic background and claimed to have gambled
critic, he was much involved in the social life of away a castle in Italy. He was one of the liveliest
72
Diaz de la Pena, Narcisse Virgile
members of the cafe guerbois circle, and led afterhe had retired to Nice, he was pestered by
the move away from there to the Nouvelle- dealers anxious to buy from him and was
Athenes. manet painted a portrait of him in offered any price he cared to name for The
1875 (Museu de Arte, Sao Paulo), explaining Plum; he suggested an inhibiting 100,000 francs.
afterwards to Antonin proust, 'I make no claim In the event, on his death his collection was
to have summed up an epoch, but to have acquired by the dealer Paul Rosenberg. See also
painted the most remarkable type in that part of ephrussi [138, 162]
the city. I painted Desboutin with as much Venturi (1939); B.E. White, Renoir, His Life,
feeling as I painted Baudelaire.' Art and Letters (1984); Renoir, Hay ward Gal-
In entitling the portrait The Artist, Manet lery, London, exhibition catalogue (1985)
was in fact underlining one of Desboutin's main
characteristics. He was typical of a whole group Dewhurst, Wynford (1 868-1927) After stu-
of not particularly successful painters, who dying painting in Paris in the 1890s, he returned
were always on the fringe of the Impressionist to England, where he wrote extensively about
movement he exhibited at the 1 876 exhibition art. In 1904 he published Impressionist Painting;
but who, through a lack of determination or its Genesis and Development, consisting of arti-
an excessive preoccupation with cafe life and cles that he had written for the Artist, the Studio
other distractions, never achieved the repu- and Pall Mall Magazine. Based largely on his
tation of the movement's leading figures. contacts with monet and with pissarro, who
Desboutin features in what seems to be a role criticized it bitterly despite the contribution he
characteristic of his personality in degas' L' Ab- had made to its composition, it was the first
sinthe of 1 876 (Musee d'Orsay). He was happier serious book on the subject to be published in
as an etcher than a painter in oils, and his English and was clearly well-intentioned. His
portraits of Manet, Degas and duranty in this interpretation of the term 'Impressionist' was
medium are convincing in presentation and generous to the point of fatuity, and it is
incisive in technique. See also portraiture [17] doubtful whether he really understood the
R. Pickvance, 'L'Absinthe en Angleterre', in underlying dynamism of the movement. He
Apollo LXXVII (15 May 1963); B. Duplaix, did, however, contribute greatly to enhancing
Marcellin Desboutin, Prince de Boheme (1985) the popularity of Monet in the English-speak-
ing world, and paid some attention to cezanne,
Desnoyers, Fernand (1826-69) An habitue of though his judgment was not flattering: 'His
the brasserie des martyrs, a resolute champion landscapes are crude and hazy, weak in colour,
of courbet and of the realist movement and many admirers of Impressionism find them
generally, he was one of the first to hail manet entirely uninteresting. . . . His figure compo-
as rising star in the art world. He was both poet sitions have been called "clumsy and brutal".
and journalist, and his most popular work was Probably his best work is to be found in his
the Chansons parisiens of 1853. m
l ^3 he was studies of still life, yet even in this direction one
one of the most vehement protagonists of the cannot help noticing that his draughtsmanship
SALON DES REFUSES. is defective.'
Hamilton (1954) Cooper (1954); Flint (1984)
Deudon, Charles (1832-1914) A lawyer and Diaz de la Pena, Narcisse Virgile (1807-76)
financier who had well-known
interests in the Born in Bordeaux, the son of a Spanish refugee,
Paris shop 'Old England'. He was a friend of and brought up by a Protestant clergyman, he
monet, pissarro and manet, as well as of was apprenticed first to a printer and then to a
Renoir, whom he met through duret and potter, but was inexorably drawn to painting.
whom he visited at chatou in 1881, when the He had a rapid success as an academic painter,
artist was painting Dejeuner des canotiers. He
his but meeting millet and through him Theodore
was mainly responsible for persuading Renoir rousseau, he became enamoured of the barbi-
to continue exhibiting at the salon. Amongst zon style of painting and rapidly established
his collectionwere Monet's Gare Saint-Lazare himself as one of its leading members, produc-
(1877; Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Mass.) ing pictures with a heavy impasto, an almost
and Manet's The Plum (1878; National Gallery melodramatic sense of nature, and an emphasis
of Art, Washington, D.C.), which he bought on dramatic lighting - qualities which can be
directly from the artist for 3500 francs. In 1899, seen at their most typical in Landscape (1870;
73
Dobigny, Emma
Impressionists. At their first exhibition he
bought cezanne's Maisoti du pendu for 300
francs, and at the auction of his pictures after his
death there were no fewer than ten renoirs
offered for sale, a fact no doubt partly due to his
connection by marriage to the charpentier
family.
74
Drawing
Drawing: Pissarro's draughtsmanship is at once precise and relaxed, and this sketch is closely related to the
many paintings of Pontoise which he did in the late 1860s.
Beaux-Arts practitioners did but to explore There were, of course, obvious differences in
pictorial possibilities and to experiment with the approach to drawing adopted by individual
potentials of composition. members of the group differences that tended
They did have precedents for this. The to increase as time went by and each artist
controversies produced by the salon des developed further along his own line of visual
refuses in 1863 had drawn from Viollet-le- exploration. There was initially the bias tow-
Duc, architect, historian and aesthetician, an ards either landscape or figure painting, each
attack on too rigid an adherence to the aca- tending to call for a specific approach to
demic tradition of life-drawing, in the course of drawing. Then there was the more fundamen-
which he said 'Beyond the confines of the life- tal distinction between an artist such as Degas
class in the academy there is a real sun, real trees, still, in his most free style of draughtsman-
even
real mountains and real people going about ship, showing the influence of Ingres and
their business, and not posing for the artist.' At something of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts tra-
the time that he was giving vent to these dition - and, at the other end of the spectrum,
opinions, there appeared a second edition of artists such as renoir and Monet, whose art
75
Drawing
76
Duranty, Louis Edmond
Manette Salomon (1867): 'There must be found 'A true picture dealer should also be an
would render human life precisely,
a line that enlightened patron; he should, if necessary,
embrace from close at hand the individual, the sacrifice his immediate interest to his artistic
particular, a living, human, inward line a convictions and oppose rather than support the
drawing more real than all other drawing a interestof speculators.' This philosophy led him
more human drawing.' See also emperaire, to support through thick and thin both
ILLUSTRATION, SEUR AT [15, 80 106, 185]
, financially and morally - the artists in whom he
F. Daulte, Le Dessin francais de Manet a believed.
Cezanne (1954); Lloyd and Thomson (1986) He
was, of course, not unmotivated by self-
and in being one of the first art dealers
interest,
Durand, Charles see carolus-duran, emile- to exploit the system of providing regular
auguste income in return for a lien on what his artists
produced, he did himself no disservice. Nor
Durand-Ruel, Paul (183 1-1922) The son of a must be thought that his relationship with the
it
picture dealer, Jean-Marie-Fortune (who had Impressionists was always a happy one. They
been a supporter of Delacroix and who was were continually complaining, selling works
amongst the first to deal in works by corot, through other dealers on the sly and, in the case
daubigny, courbet and others), Paul took of Monet and Degas, were often downright
control of the family business in 1865. His first hostile. Sometimes, too, his influence was
real contact with the Impressionists was in 1 87 1 indirect, even inadvertent. In 1874, for instance,
when he met pissarro at the gallery he had badly hit by the recession of that year, he had to
opened in London (see England) and intro- close his London gallery, and was forced to stop
duced him to monet. On returning to Paris, buying new works. It was this, as much as
Durand-Ruel decided that, whilst continuing anything else, that induced his artists, as an
to sell works by the barbizon School and attempt at self-help, to organize their first joint
others, he would nail his colours to the mast of exhibition.
what was to become Impressionism; without of
Infinitely resourceful in the cultivation
him its course would have been very different. potential patrons, Durand-Ruel had keen a
The first major public demonstration of his sense of public relations, issuing a variety of
commitment came with an exhibition held in publications; these included a three-volume
London in 1872, at which he showed 13 works catalogue of the most important works in his
by manet, 9 by Pissarro, 6 by sisley, 4 by collection (1874) with 300 reproductions,
Monet, 3 by degas and 1 by renoir. Three which not only gave considerable emphasis to
years previously he had stated his policy as a the works by Impressionists but included an
dealer in the pages of a magazine he edited, the essay on them by Armand silvestre. His energy
Revue de I'art et de la curiosite (December 1869): was boundless; he continued arranging exhibi-
tions in London even after the closure of his
gallery and, after holding two exhibitions in
New York, opened a gallery there in 1888 (see
usa). Impressionism would have happened
without him; but the fact that it achieved the
position it did in such a comparatively short
time was due more to him than to anyone else.
See also Belgium, boussod and valadon,
GERMANY, HOTEL DROUOT, PATRONS AND
COLLECTORS, PETIT, PRICES, SOCIETY OF FRENCH
ARTISTS, SPAIN, VENTURI [177]
Venturi (1939); Rewald (1973); D. Wilden-
stein, Monet; biographie et catalogue, 4 vols.
(1974-85)
11
Duret, Theodore
de Brie, President of the Winegrowers' Society supported Courbet in his destruction of the
of Charente, owner of a cognac distillery, Vendome Column, and when the government
politician, journalist and art critic, Duret had of Thiers came to power he undertook a long
remarkable portraits of himself painted by and tactful tour of the Far East. Elegant and
manet (1868; Musee des Beaux-Arts, Paris), dandified, Duret was a great Anglophile;
whistler (1883; Metropolitan Museum, New Whistler and George moore had been amongst
York) and Vuillard. He was related to courbet, his earliest friends, and he made an annual visit
and met Manet for the first time by chance in to London.
Madrid in 1865; their acquaintance soon The debt that the Impressionists owed him
ripened into friendship. In 1868 Duret, together was great. A frequenter of the cafe guerbois
with zola and others, started a paper, La and the Nouvelle-Athenes, he was intimately
Tribune fran^aise. An ardent republican, he involved in their discussions, and supported
78
Ecole des Beaux-Arts
them in his writings with perspicacity and in his students. The entire approach to art was based
patronage with generosity. Amongst other on obtaining mastery of the human form;
things, he was partly responsible for spreading students began by learning to draw component
amongst them an appreciation of Japanese art, parts of the human anatomy and then united
especially through prints that he had acquired in them into studies of the whole body, amassing
the course of his journey to the Orient. In 1878 groups of bodies to form 'compositions'. Those
he published Les Peintres impressionnistes, which who had been grounded in this visual grammar
combined a short but illuminating general found it very difficult to escape from its
account of the movement with biographical influence, though this was by no means invaria-
notes on monet, sisley, morisot, renoir and bly a bad thing. It was his training at the Ecole
pissarro. Seven years later there appeared a des Beaux-Arts that underpinned degas' whole
collection of his reviews of the salons and his artistic output, even though he adapted it to his
of Courbet, van gogh and Renoir. the members of the Fine Arts section of the
T. Duret, Les Peintres impressionnistes (1878),
Critique d'avant-garde (1885); Hamilton (1954);
Rewald (1973)
79
Emperaire, Achille
institut de France from subjects in ancient dwarf-like body and a large head. He made
history or the bible. Candidates had 36 hours in constant and unsuccessful attempts early in life
which to prepare a detailed sketch indicating to establish himself as a painter in Paris, but was
the main of the composition with suffi-
lines forced to return to his native aix, where he
cient clarity, so that nothing could be changed partly supported himself by selling 'porno-
in the final painting; this was sealed and put in graphic' drawings to students at the university.
safe keeping. They then had 70 days in which to In fact his drawings are of great interest,
produce in their rooms at the Ecole the final showing the use of black and white merged to
painting; they were not allowed to use models, form subtle nuances of grey and to model
engravings or tracings brought in from outside. volume. His draughtsmanship is strongly remi-
The eventual winner went on to the French niscent of that of Odilon Redon and, indeed, of
Academy at Rome, where he was free to work seurat. Few of his paintings survive, but those
on his own, studying at leisure, without the that do (e.g. in the Musee Granet at Aix) show a
supervision of a professor, drawing and paint- heavy impasto style, which is reminiscent of
ing both landscape and monuments, and that adopted by Monticelli and also by various
permitted, within certain limitations, to travel of his contemporaries at Aix.
around ITALY. V. Nicollas, Achille Emperaire (1953); Rewald
In 1863 the Ecole set up an atelier teaching (1985)
system, based on that which had been operating
outside for some time, and featuring artists
it England
such Gustave moreau and Leon Bonnat as
as The Impressionists in England
tutors. The ateliers were largely under the Although it is possible to exaggerate the
control of a massier, who set the poses of the contribution which English artists such as
living model and managed the general disci- Turner, Constable and others made to the
pline of each studio, which the nominal pro- evolution of Impressionism {see antecedents),
fessor visited only once or twice a week. See also there can be no doubt that, like many of their
ACADEMIC ART, CORMON, FOURCAUD, GEROME, fellow painters in France ever since the begin-
GLEYRE, GUICHARD, TECHNIQUE nings of Romanticism, the Impressionists
E. Miintz, Guide de VEcole nationale des Beaux- looked across the Channel, at least on a cultural
Arts (1889); Harrison and White (1965); Boime plane, with affection and respect, manet was the
(1986) first to visit London, in 1868, mainly in the
So
England
> '.;';
j
England: Monet painted this view of Hyde Park in 1871 during his stay in London to avoid the troubles
of the Franco-Prussian War.
working in the Isle of Wight, which had been a one attracted a good
his earlier exhibitions, this
favourite resort of Berthe morisot and her deal of attention in the pressand elsewhere, and
family in the mid-i870s, and in 1897 he spent can be taken to represent the first serious impact
several months in Wales, renoir visited Lon- of the movement on English critics and
don in 1895 with the publisher Paul Gallimard, collectors.
having two years earlier stayed in Guernsey.
Between 1870 and 1875 durand-ruel, who English reactions to Impressionism
had also fled to England during the Franco- English reactions to the works of the
Prussian War, held a series of exhibitions in a Impressionists were far less favourable than
gallery he had rented at 168 New Bond Street. those in the USA. The first British collector to
They were supposed to represent a partly buy works by the Impressionists was Henry
fictional organization, the society of French Hill of Brighton, who used the title of Captain,
artists, but were in effect a selection of his own but was described by Durand-Ruel as a tailor.
Paris stock, with a few additions. They covered He acquired no less than seven works by Degas
a wide range of artists from Ingres onwards, to add to a collection that was predominantly
with a few English painters such as Burne- composed of fashionable English painters such
Jones, but also included works by the, to him, as Orchardson. Another early collector was
newly discovered innovators Monet, Manet, Samuel Barlow, a botanist and owner of a
Pissarro, Sisley and degas. When he returned to bleach factory in Lancaster, who in the early
Paris at the end of hostilities, Durand-Ruel left 1880s acquired four paintings by Pissarro. On
the gallery in the charge of Charles W. the advice of Legros, the Greek businessman
Deschamps. At the end of 1875 financial Constantine Alexander Ionides (1833 1900)
problems forced him to close the gallery, but bought Degas' Orchestre de Robert le Diable
this was not the end of his dealing activities in (1876; Victoria and Albert Museum) some time
London. In 1882 he showed a few paintings at a before 1884. Between 1885 and 1899 sickert
gallery he had rented in King Street, St James's, bought a number of works by Degas, and a Mr
and in the spring of 1883 a much larger and Burke, about whom nothing is known,
more extensively advertised exhibition took acquired works by Degas, Sisley and Pissarro in
place at Dowdeswell's Galleries, 133 New the 1890s. At about the same time Hill's pictures
Bond Street. This included 7 works by Degas, 3 came up for sale at Christie's, and fetched prices
by Manet, 7 by Monet, 2 by cassatt, 3 by around the 50 - 60 mark, though Degas'
Morisot, 9 by Renoir and 8 by Sisley. Unlike L' Absinthe, or Au cafe (1876; Musee d'Orsay),
81
England
Sisley, The Bridge at Hampton Court, 1874: born in Paris of English parents, Sisley was a frequent visitor to
England.
was bought for 180 by Alexander Reid of on Whistler's advice, by the publisher Thomas
Glasgow, who was later to do so much for van Fisher Unwin. Another outlet was the New
GOGH. The painting was later acquired by English Art Club (see below), which in 1892 and
Arthur Studd, a fellow student in Paris with 1893 showed works by Degas and Monet.
William Rothenstein and Roger Fry, who In all, between 1870 and 1900, works by one
himself in 1892 paid ^200 for one of Monet's or more of the Impressionists were exhibited in
Haystacks. It is significant that, whereas the London on 16 occasions. In The Conrtauld
Americans were very keen on Monet, from Collection (London, 1954), Douglas Cooper
quite an early stage, the English were almost estimated that up to 1905, when Durand-Ruel
exclusively dedicated to the stylistically more held an important exhibition of Impressionist
conventional Degas. works in London (at which he sold some ten
There were other people, such as George paintings, mostly to non-English collectors),
moore, Whistler and sargent, who possessed English buyers had acquired 25 paintings by
works by Impressionists, but this was largely an Degas, 6 by Manet, 4 by Monet, and about 20
accident of friendship rather than a deliberate divided between Pissarro, Renoir and Sisley.
collecting policy. Although primarily con- An attempt to present the National Gallery
cerned with marketing his own works, with a work by Monet in 1905 was a failure,
Whistler was not unmindful of his old friends, whilst even the critic D.s. maccoll, during his
and when he founded the International Society tenure of office as Director of the Tate Gallery
in 1898 he persuaded Renoir, Cezanne, Sisley from 1906 to, 191 1, made no attempt to buy
and Pissarro to exhibit. Included in the first one. The situation was redeemed, slightly later,
exhibition were three works by Degas, which by the activities of Sir Hugh lane and Samuel
had been bought some time earlier, probably Courtauld.
82
England
The reactions of English critics were predic- Princess Louise, herself a critic and sculptor, and
table.Art magazines such as the Magazine of Art Mr and Mrs Joseph Chamberlain. Only ten
and Portfolio, as well as national newspapers paintings, however, were sold, and Frank
such as The Times, gave quite a large amount of Rutter later summed up the situation in 1933
space to Parisian exhibitions and French art when he wrote in Art in My Time, 'Except for a
generally, but they tended to concentrate on its few hundred artists, art students and enthusiasts,
more acceptable and academic forms, with the Impressionist exhibition made very little
painters such as Rosa Bonheur, Ernest Meisso- impression on London or England. The general
nier and even, at times, millet receiving public was hardly aware of its existence and it
favourable attention. Philip hamerton set the received nothing like the public attention that
tone when, reviewing the salon des refuses, he was given five years later to the Post-
referred to Manet as 'some wretched French- Impressionist exhibition.'
man' and to the Dejeuner sur Vherbe as 'leading to
the inference that the nude when painted by Impressionism and English painting
vulgar men is invariably indecent' {Fine Arts' The appointment of Legros to the Slade School
Quarterly, October 1863). Reviewing Durand- of Art in opened up a channel of
1876
Ruel's 1883 of Impressionists at
exhibition communication between English art students
Dowdeswell's Morning Post,
Galleries, for the and what was going on in Paris, and this was
he praised it for 'having provided the London institutionalized by the foundation of the New
season with a new sensation which, besides its English Art Club in 1886. It had originally been
novelty, has the pleasant recommendation of intended to call this 'The Society of Anglo-
also being mirth-provoking ... it is something French Artists', and its goal was 'to vindicate
for Londoners to have in their midst a source of the soundness of engrafting English feeling and
comic entertainment, which Parisians heartily sentiment on what is known as French tech-
enjoy.' nique'. In fact, this 'technique' could involve a
Nevertheless, there were some serious whole gamut of devices, not all of which had
attempts to come to grips with this new kind of anything to do with Impressionism as such, and
art, though many were limited by a widely held which owed more to Bastien-Lepage and the
English belief that landscape was inferior to barbizon School than to Monet or Renoir.
figure painting. The critic of the St fames' Indeed, George Clausen, one of the most active
Gazette put when, after praising the
it clearly members of the Club, expressed a typically
landscapes of Monet and Renoir, he went on to English point of view when he said 'One cannot
add the proviso that 'the real strength of the help feeling that some Impressionist work is, in
school lies in the figure pictures of such men as spite of its beauty, disgusting and violent, and it
Manet and Degas' (25 April 1883). Those who is questionable if, after all, this method is as true
were prepared to look at the paintings with a to nature as the older convention of painting,
comparatively unprejudiced eye invariably where the effect is lessbrilliant but more
praised Monet: 'How remarkable in all his restful.'
paintings is the expression of nature' {The There was within the New English Art Club
Academy, 23 April 1883); though the same a group of artists Sickert, Wilson Steer and
writer blamed him for choosing unworthy Spencer Gore being the most prominent,
stretches of landscape, condemning the Seine at though there were others, such as Sargent,
Argenteuil as 'a very common river'. Laura Knight and even at times Augustus John
By the time Durand-Ruel arranged another who showed that Impressionism had
exhibition in London 22 years later, the British influenced them in their sense of colour, the
public had been exposed to a barrage of writing vivacity of their brushwork and their quest for a
favourable to the Impressionists, ranging from certain immediacy of observation. But their
Wynford dewhurst's Impressionist Painting; its allegiance was only slight. There was a constant
Genesis and Development (1904) to the more belief, expressed by painters themselves and
sophisticated special pleading of D.S. MacColl, repeatedly echoed by the more conservative
Sickert and Frank rutter, as well as to the less critics, that the English, by choosing 'nicer'
accurate but better written prose of George subjects, in a decorous setting, painted with a
Moore. The result was that the exhibition light palette and preferably out-of-doors, were
attracted a great deal of publicity and drew far better than the French, who 'took things to
large crowds - up to 3000 a day - including the extremes'.
83
Ephrussi, Charles
Dame Laura Knight's The Beach (1908) shows the Pissarro's studio at Eragny. 1890, where he first
There was in reality no such thing as -P. Kolb and J. Adhemar, 'Charles Ephrussi
Impressionism in England. On the other hand etc.', in Gazette des Beaux-Arts (Jan. 1984)
there was an 'Impressionistic' school, which
was to have a vital influence on the official scene Eragny A village on the banks of the Epte.
for at least the first three decades of the 20th c. some 30 kms (18^ miles) south of Dieppe.
becoming a semi-official art style, which even- pissarro first came to live there in 1884, and his
tually dominated the most representative ele- family's devotion to the place is shown by the
ments in English art life: the Slade School of fact that when, ten years later, they established a
Art, the New English Art Club and the Royal fine art press in London, they gave it the name
Academy. Here, Impressionism was never an of the Eragny Press (see pissarro, lucien). It
avant-garde movement; the high explorative became Pissarro's main centre for work during
ground of British painting was occupied by the last ten years of his life, and he painted its
time his secretary. [ 162] South inspired Cezanne for many years.
84
Fantin-Latour, Henri
went there
of his
zola
in
F
1882, was equally entranced {Crags at L'Estaque,
1882; Museum of Fine Arts, Boston). Faivre, Jules Abel (1 867-1945) A pupil and
friend of renoir, who helped him in giving
Etretat A thriving fishing village, 26 kms (16 lessons to Julie Manet and Jeanne Baudot, and
miles) east of Le Havre,which had been popular who accompanied him on his trip to Holland.
with Delacroix, and which courbet had made He later became well-known as a contributor to
into one of his favourite painting sites. They magazines such as Le Rire and L'Assiette au
were especially attracted by the arch-like rock beurre.
formations that characterize the three promon- B.E. White, Renoir, His Life, Art and Letters
tories which jut out into the sea around the (1984); Roberts and Roberts (1987)
village.
Perhaps because of the Courbet connection, Fantin-Latour, Ignace-Henri-Jean-Theo-
monet was also very much attracted by the dore (1 836-1904) Born in Grenoble and
place, though there was the additional fact that trained as an artist first by his father and later by
the singer faure, a great patron of the Impres- LECOQ DE BOISBAUDRAN and at the ECOLE DES
sionists, had a villa there, which he lent to the beaux-arts, he very quickly became involved
painter in 1885. Other Parisian notables who with all the younger generation of forward-
had 'secondary residences' in Etretat were thinking artists, including manet, whistler,
85
Faure, Jean-Baptiste
Fantin-Latour painted this group what was virtually the 'Batignolles group' in Manet's studio,
portrait of
in 1870. From left to right, Scholderer, Manet, Renoir, Astruc (seated), Zola, Maitre, Bazille and Monet.
monet, renoir, and their literary equivalents, Whistler, Legros and Rossetti, whom he had
baudelaire, zola and mallarme. The memor- wanted to include in the Hommage a Delacroix
ials to these contacts are the well-known group painting.
paintings Hommage a Delacroix (1863; Musee Later, Fantin turned towards a more imagi-
d'Orsay), which included Baudelaire, legros, native kind of work, based very frequently on
BRACQUEMOND, DURANTY, BALLEROY and Fantin musical themes from the works of composers
himself, and Studio in the Batignolles Quarter such as Wagner, Berlioz and Schumann, which
(Musee d'Orsay), in which appeared Zola, was in sympathy with the Symbolist tendencies
astruc, bazille, Monet, Manet and Renoir, then current in both painting and literature and
and which was exhibited at the Salon of 1870. had affinities with the works of moreau and
Despite his closeness to the Impressionists and Redon. See also batignolles, illustration,
his sympathetic response to what they were MORISOT, SCHOLDERER [23]
doing, his work was almost entirely unin- V. Fantin-Latour, Catalogue de I'oeuvre com-
fluenced by their stylistic innovations. In the plete de Fantin-Latour (191 1); J. and E. Pennell,
1870s and 1880s he pursued a kind of photo- The Whistler Journal (1921); Fantin-Latour,
graphic realism that owed something to the Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition catalogue (1982)
traditions of the Ecole des Beaux-Arts, and
something courbet. His many flower and
to Faure, Jean-Baptiste (1 830-1914) Probably
still-life however, did possess a
paintings, the most interesting and catholic collector of
greater lightness and freshness of handling, works by the Impressionists, as well as being
which made them very popular amongst the their patron and friend, Faure made his debut at
English. He spent a lot of time in London from the Paris Opera in 1861 as a baritone, and
the early 1860s, being very intimate with became almost immediately widely popular. A
86
Feneon, Felix
successful teacher of singing, who published spoiled his relationship with the other
several books on the subject, he was also a Impressionists.
prolific composer of songs, one of which, Les One of Faure's biggest successes had been as
Rameaux, can still be heard on French concert Hamlet in Thomas' opera of the same name.
platforms. The hundredth performance had been sche-
He showed an early interest in art and duled to take place on the night of 28 October
collecting, and struck up a mutually advan- 1 873 but on the previous night the opera house
,
tageous friendship with durand-ruel, from on the rue Le Peletier was burned down and it
whom he purchased works by delacroix and had to be transferred elsewhere. Three years
corot. The two spent a lot of time together in later Faure retired from the official Opera and
London in 187071; the singer was very commissioned Manet to paint him as Hamlet
popular in England and retained a house there, (Folkwang Museum, Essen). He was not alto-
offering accommodation to sisley for four gether satisfied with the painting, which was
months in 1 874. He became deeply interested in also received coldly by the critics when it was
the group of new artists whom Durand-Ruel exhibited at the Salon; one of them described it
was beginning to promote and in 1873 he as 'a wooden head on which is stuck a false
bought an important group of manets: Lola de beard, with an open mouth crying ridiculously
Valence (1862; Musee d'Orsay) for 2500 francs; and big eyes looking like two unlit gaslights'.
Luncheon in the Studio (1868; Bayerische Staats- Faure continued to collect works by Manet,
gemaldesammlungen, Munich) and Le Bon however, buying them either directly from the
Bock (1873; Philadelphia Museum of Art) for a painter or through Durand-Ruel, and even-
total of 6000 These were generous
francs. tually accumulated 68 of them. In April 1878, in
prices, made possible by the fact that Faure was a momentary lack of confidence, he sent 42 of
reputed to be earning in excess of 100,000 francs his pictures for sale at the hotel drouot, but he
a year. had to buy most of them back himself, Le Bon
In the same year he also bought degas' Aux Bock being withdrawn at 10,000 francs.
Courses en Provence (1869; Boston Museum of During this period Faure was also buying
Fine Arts) for 1300 francs. This marked the monets on a lavish scale. His holdings of renoir
beginning of a close relationship between the were slightly less extensive but he had some 30
two, in the course of which Faure built up the works by sisley and a number by pissarro.
most important collection of works by Degas - Faure belatedly received the Legion of Honour
eleven of them - in France. The first of these in1 88 1, at the same time as Manet, through the
was the Examen de danse (Payne Collection), good offices of their mutual friend Antonin
which he commissioned for 5000 francs in 1872, proust. See also etretat, music, portraiture
and which Degas finished in 1874. In the same [126, 174]
year, at the painter's request, he bought back Venturi (1939); A. Callen, 'Faure and Manet',
from Durand-Ruel for 8000 francs six paintings in Gazette desBeaux- Arts (March 1974); Degas,
with which Degas was not satisfied. He handed Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition catalogue (1988)
them over to the painter, together with 1500
francs, on condition that he would receive, Feneon, Felix (1861-1944) Writer, art critic
when they were finished, four large paintings and active anarchist, he published a brochure
on which Degas was working. Two of these, entitled The Impressionists in 1886, in which he
including L'Orchestre de Robert le Diable (Vic- put forward the view that the vital impulse of
toria and Albert Museum), were finished in the movement was dead and that its mantle had
1876, but Degas did not complete the transac- been assumed by the 'Divisionists' seurat and
tion until 1887, and then only as a consequence signac. He went on to promote their works in
of legal action against him. The relations the pages of the Symbolist magazine La Revue
between the two had become completely blanche, to which he became a regular contribu-
soured. In the 1890s Faure sold to Durand- tor, and in the offices of which he organized the
Ruel, at a handsome profit, all the works by first retrospective exhibition of Seurat's work
Degas that he had acquired, and when in 1902 in 1900; he also edited the first catalogue raisonne
he published Notice sur la collection J. -B. Faure, of his works. Despite his advocacy of the post-
suivi du catalogue des tableaux formant cette impressionists, he never ceased to praise their
collection, Degas was the only important predecessors, emphasizing always the extent to
Impressionist unrepresented. Nothing like this which they had progressed from the initial
87
Fiquet, Hortense
plot and planting a bomb in a Paris cafe, he was by RENOIR, SISLEY, COURBET, COROT, DAUBIGNY,
told by the judge that he had been seen skulking boudin and pissarro.
behind a lamp post, and asked, 'Where exactly
is behind a lamp post?'
Feneon, Oeuvres plus que completes, 2 vols.
F.
88
France
89
France
lavished on the arts by a state anxious to the capital, which for two months was ravaged
preserve its own prestige, but reluctant to by fighting as 30,000 Communards struggled
encourage any art might imperii
form that with 130,000 government troops. In the final
what were seen as 'the foundations of society'. assault and the blood-letting that followed,
There were indeed marked analogies between nearly 20,000 Parisians were killed.
the Second Empire and the reign of Louis XIV. The curious thing is that the Third Republic,
The problem was that Napoleon III was an which was to survive until 1940 through 107
adventurer who lacked both the flair and the different governments, had a far more felicitous
self-confidence that such a role demands; too career than these sombre beginnings would
nice to be a villain, he was too shifty to be a have seemed to promise, and the period up to
hero. Virtually tricked into a disastrous war the outbreak of the First World War appears in
with Prussia in 1870, he was defeated in the history as la belle epoque. By 1874 France had
most humiliating way in a matter of weeks, and already paid the German indemnity and
fled toEngland, where he died a year later. As a balanced budget. The wounds of the Com-
its
result of the war, France lost Alsace and mune were healed by a general amnesty in
Lorraine with a population of nearly 1^ million, 1880, when Marshal Mac-Mahon was suc-
important mining enterprises and industries, ceeded as President by the eminently democra-
and the city of Strasbourg, and had to pay an tic lawyer Jules Grevy. Between 1870 and 1900
indemnity to the Germans of 5 billion francs. the national income doubled, industrial pro-
Peace was made by the newly elected President duction tripled, and foreign trade increased by
Adolphe Thiers in February 1871, and a month three-quarters. A new iron vein was discovered
later revolution broke out in Paris, which had in the east of the country, greater in potential
endured a five-month siege by the Prussians. than any that had been sequestrated by the
The government moved to Versailles, and a Germans. The French overseas empire, already
self-governing Commune was proclaimed in established in Algiers and Tunisia, was
France: Manet's Musique aux Tuileries (1862) is a perfect image of the glittering social life of Paris under
the Second Empire. It features, among others, Manet, de Balleroy, Astruc, Fantin-Latour and Baudelaire.
90
France
France: the boulevard des Capucines, where the first Impressionist exhibition was held, c. 1890. The busy
life of this Parisian thoroughfare is captured in paintings by Monet.
extended to Central Africa and Indo-China, and art classes became an essential part of
and a series of great international exhibitions education at all pre-graduate levels. Art educa-
proved, to the delight of its inhabitants and the tion was greatly improved by the activities of
surprise or chagrin of the rest of the world, that men such as F.L. Ravaisson-Mollien (1813
Paris had become the virtual capital of Europe. 1900), whose De V Enseignement de Yart dans les
There were, of course, hiccoughs; occasional of 1854 became the accepted guide, until
lycees
financial slumps; scandals of a financial or sexual the beginning of the next century. Gaston
kind; the danger of a right-wing coup d'etat Quenioux, who was professor at the Ecole des
under General Boulanger in 1889, and the Arts Decoratifs in Paris, introduced another
divisive trauma of the Dreyfus affair, which system of teaching art, in which the emphasis
dragged on from 1893 until 1906. But on the was on the recording of personal impressions,
whole, the picture was one of a reasonably rather than on technical skill. The surviving
prosperous and well-ordered society. drawings that cezanne and Zola produced
The apparently confused and confusing pat- during their early days in aix-en-provence
tern of political events between the reign of indicate the level of achievement already
Louis-Philippe and the end of the century did reached by young students in the 1850s.
little to alter two fundamental facts: that the As elsewhere in the western world, science
country was, during this period, reaping the and technology played an increasingly import-
fruits of the Industrial Revolution, and that real ant role in human affairs. France was a pioneer
power was firmly in the hands of the urban and of technical education, and in the Ecole Nor-
rural bourgeoisie, railways spread over the male Superieure had a teaching institute that
country at an amazing speed; in 1850 there were was for long unequalled in Europe. Paris was
3083 kms (1914 miles) of track; in 1900, 13,059 the first city in Europe to be lit by electricity;
kms (8 1 10 miles); infant mortality dropped Charles Tellier (1828-19 13) introduced the
from 179 per thousand in 1861 to 126 in 1900; concept of food-refrigeration; Alphonse Beau
the number of houses rose from 7 million in de Rochas (1815-93) developed the principle of
1847 to 9^ million in 1900. There were constant the internal combustion machine; Charles Cros
improvements in education at all levels, culmi- (1842-88), who was also a poet, was one of the
nating in 1897 with the establishment of a pioneers of colour photography; and it was in
network of provincial universities. The ecole France that reinforced concrete was first used,
des beaux-arts was reconstituted in the 1870s, the first aerial photographs were taken, and the
9i
Franco-Prussian War
evolved. Georges Dufayel, originally a photo- mother and his own family, joined his half-
grapher, started a hire-purchase business, which sister, who lived in London; monet, leaving his
by 1880 had nearly 2 million clients. Large wife and child behind, also went there, as did
department stores opened (Monet's friend and daubigny, bonvin, fantin-latour and others;
patron hoschede was the director of one), and durand-ruel opened a gallery in New Bond
it was the same pressures that brought about Street, boudin and diaz went to Brussels.
thesephenomena which stimulated the rapid degas remained in Paris, enlisted in the infan-
growth of the art trade during the period. See try, and was posted to the fortifications of the
also POLITICS, SOCIAL BACKGROUND city; in his unit he met Henri rouart, who
Clark (1973a); Zeldin (1973); M. Crubcllier, became one of his closest friends, sisley,
Histoire culturelle de la France XIX-XX siecles although British, stayed on at louveciennes,
(1974); J.M. Mernman, French Cities in the but as a consequence of the war the family
Nineteenth Century (1982) fortune was lost and his life was henceforward
were significant, bazille was killed in action on defeat of the Commune in 1871.
92
Gangnat, Maurice
G Dr
Gogh
Gachet's house
stayed in 1890.
in
^---fe--
Auvers-sur-Oise, where Van
Gachet, Dr Paul (1 828-1909) Perhaps one of was in Auvers that he committed suicide.
the most fascinating figures in the history of Gachet's great collection of paintings by all the
Impressionism, he was a doctor who specialized major figures of the movement was given to the
in homeopathy, a psychiatrist, an engraver, a state by his son and is now in the Musee
Darwinian, a Socialist and a consistently helpful d'Orsay. See also bruyas, prints, vetheuil [22]
and generous patron and friend to all those P. Gachet, Deux Amis des impressionnistes, Le
artists with whom he came into contact. As a Docteur Gachet et Murer (1956), Lettres Impres-
young student in Paris he had frequented the sionnistes(1957); R. Delage, 'Chabrier et ses
brasserie des martyrs, and after concluding his amis impressionnistes', in L'Oeil (Dec. 1973)
medical studies at Montpellier he became a
frequenter of the seminal cafe guerbois. He Gaillard, Marie-Anne see callias, nina de
bought a house
auvers-sur-olse and, in his
at
studio there, became an enthusiastic engraver, Gangnat, Maurice (1 856-1924) An engineer
partly as a consequence of his earlier contacts educated at the Ecole des Arts et Manufacture
with Daumier, Charles Meryon and Rodolphc and once a business associate of Alfred Natan-
Bresdin, artists whose styles were reflected in his son, the founder of the important avant-garde
own. He signed his works 'Paul van Ryssel', magazine, La Revue blanche. He retired from
deriving the surname from his native village business early and began to build up a collection
near Lille. of paintings, starting with a Vuillard from
It was in this studio that several of the Bernheim-Jeune in 1905 and following it in the
Impressionists took up etching; cezanne pro- succeeding year with works by renoir,
duced there an etching of guillaumin, as well as cezanne and jongkind. He then met Renoir
painting a number of flower pieces arranged in personally at the home of their mutual friend,
him by the doctor's wife. On the
Delft vases for the publisher Paul Gallimard, and became a
recommendation of pissarro, Gachet took close friend, being frequently invited to
vincent van gogh into his house in 1890, and it Renoir's home at Cagnes-sur-Mer.
93
Gasquet, Joachim
Between then and the painter's death, he priest and a teacher, being headmaster of the
accumulated over 150 of his works, mostly Cours Saint-Augustin in the boulevard Hauss-
small, informal paintings; he also com- mann. Eventually he returned to his native
missioned seven works, including a portrait of village of Boulon, near Caen, where he became
his son Philippe (1906; Private collection), one mayor. He was a regular client of durand-
of himself (1916; Private collection), and the ruel, but also bought directly from the Impres-
Dancing Figures (1909; National Gallery, Lon- sionists themselves, including from pissarro
don). Renoir said of Gangnat 'He has an eye'. and Renoir, thus circumventing the commis-
After his father's death, Philippe Gangnat sion they should have paid to Durand-Ruel.
presented Gabrielle with Roses (191 1; Musee This led, on one occasion, to a hilarious
d'Orsay) to the French nation before the sale of imbroglio with Renoir; abashed to discover
the collection in 1925. [220] that some of his paintings were coming up in a
E. Faure, 'A propos d'une collection celebre; sale of works belonging to the Abbe, Renoir
La Collection Gangnat', in La Renaissance de apologized profusely to Durand-Ruel, who did
Vart jrancais (April 1925); Renoir, Hayward not admit that he had already bought the
Gallery, London, exhibition catalogue (1985) collection for 101,000 francs. It consisted entire-
ly of paintings by the Impressionists - an
Gasquet, Joachim (1873-1921) The son of unusual thing at the time - and contained works
Henri Gasquet, a childhood friend of cezanne, of a very high quality.
he was a poet who wrote exuberant verse in Renoir, Hayward Gallery, London, exhibi-
Provencal. He first met the painter in April tion catalogue (1985)
1869, and they struck up a close friendship that
lasted until 1904, when they quarrelled with Gauguin, Paul (1848-1903) Although his
that bitterness that Cezanne always managed to main achievements were to lie elsewhere,
introduce into his relationships with others. Gauguin was, to use a fanciful metaphor,
During their period of friendship, however, nursed in the bosom of Impressionism. His
they corresponded regularly; Cezanne painted attitudes to art were deeply influenced by his
a portraitof Gasquet in 1896 (Gallery of experience of its first exhibition, and he himself
Modern Warsaw) and gave him a painting
Art,
of Mont Sainte-Victoire. In the winter of 191 2-
13, Gasquet wrote a book on Cezanne, the first
edition of which appeared shortly before his
death, the second posthumously. It contained a
fascinating series of 'conversations' with the
painter, which, though they may not be a literal
transcript, are very revealing.
Gaugain, Paul-Octave, Abbe (1 850-1904) Gauguin's Portrait of Marie Lagadu, 1890, was
Born of working-class parents, he became a clearly influenced by Cezanne.
94
Gautier, Theophile
participated in those of 1880, 1881 and 1882. from Degas, who bought several paintings.
The son of a French journalist and a Peruvian There were still evident in these new works
Creole, whose mother had been a writer and a traces of pure Impressionism, and of the very
follower of Saint-Simon, he was brought up in clear influence of Cezanne (as in the Portrait of
Lima, joined the merchant navy in 1865, and in Marie Lagadu, 1890; Art Institute of Chicago)
1872 began a successful career as a stockbroker a fact pointed up by a Cezanne still life owned
in Paris. by Gauguin which is shown behind her but
In 1874 he saw the first impressionist exhibi- basically this period marked the parting of the
tion, which completely entranced him and ways between Gauguin and Impressionism. See
confirmed his desire to become a painter. He also AROSA, CORMON, INDEPENDANTS, LUXEM-
spent some 17,000 francs on works by manet, BOURG, MIRBEAU, POST-IMPRESSIONISM, PRINTS,
MONET, SISLEY, PISSARRO, RENOIR and GUILLAU- SCANDINAVIA, SCHUFFENECKER [132, igj]
min. Pissarro took a special interest in his M. Roskill, Van Gogh, Gauguin and the
attempts at painting, emphasizing that he Impressionist Circle (1970); J. Rewald, Post-
should 'look for the nature that suits your Impressionism (1978); Gauguin, Grand Palais,
temperament', and in 1876 Gauguin had a Paris, exhibition catalogue (1989)
landscape in the style of Pissarro accepted at the
salon. In the meantime Pissarro had intro- Gautier, Theophile (181 1-72) Although he
duced him to cezanne, for whose works he started his career as a painter, Gautier soon
conceived a great respect - so much so that the found his real vocation as a poet, critic and
older man began would steal his
to fear that he novelist. An ardent defender of Victor Hugo at
'sensations'. All three worked together for a time when he was considered an anarchistical
some time at pontoise, where Pissarro and and disruptive force in literature, he published
Gauguin drew pencil sketches of each other in 1835 his most famous work Mademoiselle de
(Cabinet des Dessins, Louvre). Maupin. This contained the first definitive
In 1883-84 the bank that employed him got statement of the theory of 'art for art's sake',
into difficulties and Gauguin was able to paint which was to have an important influence on
every day. He settled for a while in Rouen, subsequent aesthetic theories.
partly because Paris was too expensive for a Progressive in his social thinking, Gautier
man with five children, partly because he saw railways as positive signs of progress,
thought it would be full of wealthy patrons balloons as a means of obtaining easy commu-
who might buy his works. Rouen proved a nication, so removing the threat of war, and the
disappointment, and he joined his wife Mette machine as a means of relieving man of
and children, who had gone back to Denmark, distasteful work. He was endowed with
where she had been born. His experience of remarkable verbal facility; articles and books
Denmark was not a happy one and, having flowed from his pen, dealing not only with
returned to Paris, he went to paint in Pont- literature but with music and the visual arts. He
Aven, a well-known resort for artists. was an indefatigable traveller, writing about his
Here, he stopped working exclusively out- experiences in Spain, Russia, Greece and
of-doors, as Pissarro had taught him, and Turkey in books which also contained perti-
generally began to adopt a more independent nent and stimulating comments about art and
line. His meeting with van gogh, the influence architecture. Always supportive of new ten-
of seurat, the doctrines of signac, and a dencies, he was one of the first to recognize the
rediscovery of the merits of degas especially genius of Wagner and Berlioz. In 1861 he had
in his pastels all combined with his own streak warm praise for manet's works in the salon,
of megalomania to produce a style that had and the artist featured him in Musique aux
little in common with the thoughtful lyricism Tuileries (1862; National Gallery, London). He
of the work of his erstwhile mentor Pissarro. was, however, very critical of Olympia (1863-
Monet confessed to a liking for his Jacob 65; Musee d'Orsay). Later in life, he had
Wrestling with the Angel (1888; National Gallery indulgent things to say not only about Manet
of Scotland), which he saw at the exhibition but also about monet and renoir. Much of his
Gauguin organized in 1891 to finance his critical thinking was influenced by Baudelaire,
projected excursion to places where he could who dedicated his collection of poems Les
live on 'ecstasy, calmness and art'; the proceeds Fleurs du Mai to him. [go, 134]
amounted to 10,000 francs, some of it coming T. Gautier, V Art modeme (1856); Hamilton
95
Geffroy, Gustave
(1954); U. Finke (ed.), French Nineteenth- Julian. But it was Berlin, slightly more adven-
Century Painting and Literature (1972) turous and cosmopolitan than the Bavarian
capital, that was to provide the most successful
Geffroy, Gustave (185 5-1926) A radical jour- shop window for Impressionism.
nalist who commenced his career on clemen- In 1882 Georg Brandes (1842-1927), the
ceau's paper Justice. His literary activities later polymath Danish author of Main Currents of
took many forms; he wrote extensively about Nineteenth-Century Literature (6 vols; 1901-05),
current political and social injustices and pub- who spent a great deal of his time there (and
lished a number of novels with a strongly whose brother married Mette Gauguin's sister
realist bent. His interest in painting and Ingeborg, previously married to the Swedish
especially in Impressionism was kindled by a painter Fritz Thaulow), wrote an interesting
visit he paid to manet's studio in 1876, as a account of the impact of Impressionism on
consequence of which he came into contact German opinion, in an article later incorpor-
with all the other artists of the group, as well as ated into an extensive book about Berlin, which
Rodin, and maintained an on-going correspon- he published in 1885. It was occasioned by an
dence with most of them. His closest connec- exhibition of some ten Impressionist paintings
tion was with monet, whom he first met at bought by a 'wealthy Russian gentleman',
Belle-Ile in 1886 and about whom, some 30 possibly Carl Bernstein, a cousin of renoir's
years later, he wrote a book - Claude Monet, sa who had been buying exten-
friend ephrussi,
vie, son temps, son oeuvre (1924) which is still sivelyfrom durand-ruel. In the following
valuable in many ways. year Durand-Ruel put on an Impressionist
All his writings about Impressionism are show at the Gurlitt Galleries, billed as being
significantand amongst the most intelligently 'from the collection of a well-known German
perceptive of his time. His articles about collector'. Brandes decided that 'The first
contemporary art were collected in the eight reaction among German painters was one of
volumes of La Vie artistique, published between astonishment, almost consternation, on the part
1892 and 1903, the third volume, entitled of the youngest and most impressionable artists.
Histoire de I'impressionnisme, being the most Some did not know whether to take this
comprehensive book about the movement that seriously; one naively asked the owner whether
had so far appeared. It consisted of a historical he had actually paid for this mess of paint.
opening section followed by individual However, even those who at the beginning had
chapters devoted to each artist. He also wrote been among the most amazed and dismayed,
introductions to the catalogues of one-person came back after several days and asked to see the
exhibitions by pissarro, Monet, Rodin and pictures once more. The impression had not left
morisot, as well as to that of the sale of the them a moment's peace and they will, I think, in
burty collection. He ended his career as the the end include some of the new ideas in their
director of the Gobelins tapestry factory. work.' They did. Even Adolf Menzel, the
D. Wildenstein, Monet, biographie et catalogue
raisonne, 4 vols. (197485)
96
Germany
Germany: Terrace of the Restaurant Jacob, 1902. The contemporary subject-matter, loose brushwork and
outdoor lighting of this work explain why Liebermann is often described as a German Impressionist.
father-figure of late I9th-c. German painting, in any country outside France, in Germany the
who was admired by degas, and of whom word was used to describe almost any explora-
manet once said 'He is a great artist, but a bad tive art form, and its influence was so diffused in
painter', saw merits in monet and admired the the spheres of both technique and visual appre-
work of MORISOT. hension preclude the concept of a 'school'.
as to
By the end of the 1880s artists such as Lesser Influence, however, there was, and again this is
Ury (1861-1931) were painting palette-knife true of most countries, but it was the influence
versions of Impressionism, which had become of emancipation rather than of precedent. The
completely identified with the German avant- whole magnificent episode of German Ex-
garde, centred around the Munich
first pressionism in the first quarter of the 20th c. was
Secession in 1892 and then around the Berlin made possible by the impact of Impressionism.
Secession seven years later. Three outstanding The influence of the critics was seminal in this
painters of the period, Max Liebermann (1847- context. One of the first in the field had been
1935), Lovis Corinth (1858-1925) and Max Julius Meier-Graefe, who in 1883 had published
Slevogt (1 868-1932), were known as the a laudatory piece about Renoir. (This may have
'Triumvirate of German Impressionism'. The stimulated the patronage of Dr Franz Thur-
description is somewhat reckless. Liebermann neyssen, a Munich industrialist who built up an
and Corinth had both worked in Paris for some important collection of Impressionist works. In
time, and were influenced by corot, Courbet 19 10 he invited the whole Renoir family to stay
and others, as well as by the Impressionists. To with him at Wessling, where the painter
all three, Impressionism was at most a key to produced the portrait of his wife now in the
that liberation of light, colour and atmosphere Albright-Knox Art Gallery, Buffalo.) Meier-
that was to lead them into different, perhaps Graefe's writings about Impressionism were
more Germanic, paths. As in so many cases copious, informed, invariably favourable and
where one attempts to evaluate Impressionism often enthusiastic. In 1902 he published Manet
97
Gerome, Jean-Leon
nnd sein Kreis, which contained sections on Impressionist works. See also wolff [89, 92,
Monet, pissarro, cezanne and renoir, 170]
followed in 1904 by Der moderne Impressionis- J. Meier-Graefe, Manet und sein Kreis (1902);
mus, largely Toulouse-Lautrec,
devoted to W. Uhde, Von Bismarck bis Picasso (1938); U.
gauguin and post-impressionism. But Meier- Finke, German Painting from Romanticism to
Another important figure was that of Paul gleyre and visited Italy with him. Hencefor-
and publisher, who was
Cassirer, critic, dealer ward his career was crowned with popular and
also involved in the magazine Pan, mouthpiece official success. At each of the Expositions
of the avant-garde, and who acted as Durand- Universelles, in 1 8 5 5 and 1 867, he rose one rank
Ruel's agent in Berlin. Influential in Berlin in the Legion of Honour and in 1865 he was
before the First World War was the French nominated professor at the ecole des beaux-
writer Jules Laforgue, who had been Ephrussi's arts, and elected to the institut de France. He
secretary at the Gazette des Beaux- Arts before was extremely versatile, starting as a portrait
establishing himself in Germany. He became an painter in the style of Ingres and then, after a
habitue of the Bernstein salon, and encouraged visit to Egypt and Turkey, turned to oriental
the critic Max Klinger in his defence of the subjects to accompany the numerous classical
principles and practice of Impressionism. More themes he had already undertaken. He was
directly important was Hugo von Tschudi, bitterly opposed to the Impressionists, and
who was appointed Director of the National when the acceptance of the caillebotte bequest
Gallery in Berlin in 1896, and who was himself was being discussed he said 'The state must have
an impassioned collector, his tastes being lar- sunk very low to accept such rubbish.' He
gely influenced by Max Liebermann. His first
gesture, on assuming his post, was to buy for the
gallery Manet's Dans la serre (1879) and, later,
works by Pissarro (1897), Monet (1899) and
Renoir (1906). Other German museums
followed suit; Bremen acquired a Degas in
1903, a Monet in 1906, a Manet in 1908, a
Pissarro in 1909 and a van gogh in 191 1; the
Stadel Institute in Frankfurt acquired a Sisley in
1899, aVan Gogh in 1908, a Renoir in 1910 and
a Degas and a Manet in 1912. When in 1909 von
Tschudi was sacked from his Berlin post and
moved to the Neue Pinakothek in Munich, he
bought, or was responsible for the presentation
to the gallery of works by Cezanne, Renoir,
guillaumin, Manet, Monet and Pissarro.
Other important German collectors of this
period include the painter Max Liebermann,
who started collecting Impressionists in the
early 1890s, Oscar Schmitz, Graf Harry Kessler
and Paul von Mendelssohn-Bartholdy. It could
be said that Germany came second to the USA in
the warmth of its reactions to the new move-
ment. The artistic influence was, on the whole,
transitional and stylistically ephemeral, but
German collectors and museums had accumu- Gerome's bust of Sarah Bernhardt suggests the
lated by the 1930s an outstanding body of nature of his versatility and popularity.
98
Gleyre, Charles
Monet standing on the wisteria-covered Japanese bridge which spanned his waterlily pond at Giverny,
with Mme Hoschede and her daughter Blanche, c. 1920.
produced remarkable sculpture in tinted mar- Giverny Few places have been so completely
ble, sometimes adorned with jewellery. identified with an artist asthe little village of
F.F. Hering, Gerome; His Life and Works Giverny, close to the Seine, some 30 kms
(1892); M. Gerald, 'Gerome and Manet', in (18J miles) from Rouen, is with monet. He
Gazette des Beaux- Arts (Sep. 1967); Jean-Leon acquired a house there with the hoschedes in
Gerome, Dayton Art Institute, Ohio, exhibition 1883, and for the rest of his life it provided the
catalogue (1972) source of most of his imagery, the neighbour-
ing landscape inspiring the famous paintings of
Gervex, Henri (1 852-1929) A successful poplars (e.g. that in the Philadelphia Museum
painter of historical and mythological scenes of Art, painted and haystacks (e.g. Two
in 1891)
(for instance, those in the Hotel de Ville and the Haystacks, Art Institute of Chicago, painted in
Opera-Comique), he became famous for his the same year). Above all else, it was at Giverny
painting of a surgeon giving a demonstration of that Monet and his wife cultivated with argu-
an operation, which started off a whole spate of mentative affection and complete dedication
works on similar Realist themes. He was a the garden, which centred around a waterlily
friend of both manet and renoir. See also pond; created by slightly diverting the Epte, an
BLANCHE [192] adjoining tributary of the Seine, it was tra-
^ Equivoques; peintures jrancaises du XIXs siecle, versed by a jAPANESE-style bridge, and became
Musee des Arts Decoratifs, Paris, exhibition the subject of many of his most significant
catalogue (1973); A. Celebonovic, The Heyday paintings. Restored to their original state, the
of Salon Painting (1974) house and garden are now open to the public.
See also robinson [141 ]
Gill (Louis-Alexandre Gosset de Guignes) J. P. Hoschede, Claude Monet, ce mal-connu, 2
(184085) A well-known painter, who fre- vols, (i960); Monet's Years at Giverny, Metro-
quently exhibited at the salon, especially in the politan Museum, New York, exhibition cata-
mid-i870s. He wrote semi-serious art reviews logue (1978); C.F. Stuckey (ed.), Monet; A
for a variety ofjournals, including La Lune and Retrospective (1985)
Le Journal pour rire, and produced a celebrated
caricature of Manet's portrait of zola. Gleyre, Charles (1808-74) Born in Switzer-
E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs, land, he settled in Paris in 1838 and became an
dessinateurs et graveurs (1966) instructor at the ecole des beaux-arts. His
99
Gobillard, Yves
unhealthy; it lacks sincerity' the future Montmartre branch, where Adolphe Goupil
Impressionists left, mainly pursue their
to had started his career. Knowing the work of the
creative activities in the forest of Fontainebleau. Impressionists and being a frequent visitor to
Shortly afterwards the school closed. See also the durand-ruel gallery, he was soon engaged
ATELIER SYSTEM, BELIARD, GEROME, LEPIC, in a struggle to persuade his employers to buy
PLEIN-AIRISME their works.
J. P. Crespelle, Les Maitres de la belle-epoque In 1884 he bought a pissarro for 125 francs,
(1966); Le Musee du Luxembourg en 1874, Grand which he sold for a profit of 25 francs. At first he
Palais, Paris, exhibition catalogue (1974); proceeded cautiously, and succeeded in selling
Boime (1986) one painting each by Pissarro, sisley, monet
and renoir. After 1886, however, when his
Gobillard, Yves (1838-93) was one of Berthe brother Vincent arrived in Paris and streng-
morisot's two sisters. Although she studied thened his judgment, he became much more
painting, she did not persist with it, especially active in dealing in the work of the Impressio-
after her marriage in 1863 to Theodore Gobil- nists, despite the reluctance of his seniors. He
lard, a tax official, by whom she had three was assisted in this by the fact that Durand-Ruel
children, degas did a memorable portrait of her was going through a period of retrenchment
in 1869 (Metropolitan Museum, New York). and his painters were anxious to find other
The Correspondence of Berthe Morisot, ed. D. outlets. He was hampered in his efforts by the
Rouart (1957); Degas, Grand Palais, Paris, fact that the usual customers of the gallery were
exhibition catalogue (1988) not partial to these new forms of painting, so he
had to build up a new body of clients, some of
Gogh, Theo van (185791) The younger whom, such as vollard, were dealers them-
brother of Vincent, he joined the firm of selves. At the same time, too, Theo was
goupil-boussod-valadon in 1 878 and, after expanding his interests to include artists such as
being put in charge of its stand at the Exposition Odilon Redon, gauguin and others. In the
Universelle, he was made manager of the course of his activities he died in Holland on
100
Gogh, Vincent van
idealistic fervour that he had retained from his by Watteau, Lancret, Boucher and others that
early admiration for Millet. Pissarro, though are now housed in London's Wallace Collec-
possibly being wise after the event, said some tion. Edmond became deeply interested in
time after Van Gogh's suicide on 27 July 1890 Japanese art and published books on Utamaro
that he had always thought he would either go (1891) and Hokusai (1896), which contributed
mad, or leave the Impressionists far behind. In to the general vogue for all things Japanese. See
the event he did both. See also England, also BOUGIVAL, DURANTY, GUYS, ILLUSTRATION,
(1859),encouraged collectors, including the Manet's portrait of his only pupil, Eva Gonzales,
Marquess of Hertford, who bought paintings 1870.
102
La Grenouillere
103
Groupe des Artistes Independants
104
Guys, Constantin
large prize in the Loterie Nationale in 1891. He of his typical works, Bercy in December (1874),
became friendly with van gogh, with whose now hangs in the Assemblee Nationale in Paris.
work his own has certain affinities (1895; View E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs,
Musee d'Orsay), and in 1904 he spent
of Agay, dessinateurs et graveurs (1966)
some time in Holland. The vigour of his
brushwork, and the obvious lyrical zest that Guys, Constantin (180592) Made initially
informs his landscapes bring him close to van memorable by one of Baudelaire's most
gogh, and clearly influenced the young famous pieces of art criticism, 'The Painter of
Matisse. See also depeaux, independants Modern Life', Guys spent his early life in the
G. Lecomte, Guillaumin (1926); Rewald army and travelled widely, going to Greece to
(1985) fight in its War
of Independence, and covering
the Crimean War for the Illustrated London
Guillemet, Antoine (1 843-191 8) A pupil of News. Despite his martial air and interests, he
corot, he became friendly with cezanne and was mostly preoccupied with the life of Parisian
pissarro, whom he met at the academie Suisse, society, which he recorded in drawings and
and in 1866 he stayed with the former in aix. It watercolours marked by a brisk liveliness of
was he who introduced Cezanne to manet, line, an economy of expression, and a realism
with whom he was to remain on friendly terms, that won the approval of artists as disparate as
and who painted him standing beside Berthe courbet and degas. Thackeray greatly
MORisoTin The Balcony (1869; Musee d'Orsay). admired his works, as did nadar and the
Close to all the Impressionists, whose meetings goncourts, in whose Journal he figures promi-
at the cafe guerbois he regularly attended, he nently, manet possessed several of his wash
did not get involved in the movement from a drawings, and in 1880 drew a pastel portrait of
painterly viewpoint, persisting in his own him (Shelburne Museum, Shelburne, Ver-
mildly conservative style, which won approval mont). His drawings of contemporary life were
105
Halevy, Ludovic
H
Halevy, Ludovic (1833-1908) Novelist and
dramatist, Halevy was most famous as the
librettist of many of Offenbach's works and of
Bizet's Carmen. Although brought up as a
Catholic, he belonged to a well-known Jewish
family, and this led in 1898 to a break with
degas, who had been his friend since their Degas, Ludovic Halevy finds Madame Cardinal in an
schooldays at the Lycee Louis-le-Grand, but opera box:monotype with pastel, c. 1880.
106
Holland
appreciated. Halevy's sister, Genevieve, mar- L.W. Havemeyer, Sixteen to Sixty; Memoirs
ried Bizet and, after his death, the light-opera of a Collector (1961); F. Weitzenhoffer, The
composer Oscar Straus. See also hecht, illus- Havemeyers (1986)
tration, LITERATURE
Hecht, Albert (1842-94) A collector and a
Hamerton, Philip Gilbert (183494) An close friend of degas, who portrayed him in
English painter, critic and essayist who pub- The Ballet of Robert le Diable (1871; Metropoli-
lished several novels, books of essays and an tan Museum, New York) as the character in the
enthralling account of his life on the isle of foreground, with raised opera-glasses, looking
Innistrynich on Loch Awe (1862). He became over his shoulder. Devoted to the opera, Hecht
art critic of the influential Saturday Review and was a member of the halevy circle. A banker
in 1869 established, with Robert Seeley the by profession, he was an admirer especially of
publisher, the Portfolio, which became one of the works of manet, who depicted him in the
the most lively art journals of its time and which foreground of The Masked Ball at the Opera
he continued to edit until his death. Having (1873-74; National Gallery of Art, Wash-
written a hostile on the salon des
article ington). His brother Henri was also a collector
refuses in 1863, he published in 1892 The and devotee of the opera.
Present State of the Fine Arts in France, a
collection of articles on the subject that had Holland manet was the of the Impression-
first
previously appeared in the Portfolio. In these he ists to have close contact with Holland, visiting
attacked the Impressionists generally for 'their it in his early twenties either with, or to see, a
resolute refusal of concession to all established young Dutch girl, Suzanne leenhoff, with
views about taste'. He also attacked pissarro for whom he was in love. She was the daughter of
ruining the view of a cathedral by allowing the an organist and herself an admirable pianist,
picture to be dominated by a factory chimney, specializing in modern music, especially that of
but had kind words to say about degas. See also Schumann, who was then comparatively un-
ENGLAND, SALON, REALISM known in France. She became Manet's mistress
Dictionary of National Biography; Cooper
(1954); Flint (1984)
107
Holland
Holland: G.H. Breitner's Paleissmat, Amsterdam (c. 1896). The similarity with street scenes by Caillebotte
and Degas - in the dramatic use of perspective and the photographic immediacy - is striking.
108
Hoschede, Ernest and Alice
courbet, corot and the barbizon School. This Hoschede, Ernest (1838-90) and Alice
is especially evident in the paintings of G.H. (1841 1911) A director of one of those large
Breitner (1 857-1923), who also used a kind of department became such a feature of
stores that
visual realism which, in its indebtedness to the Parisian during the period of the Second
life
arbitrary viewpoints of the camera, comes close Empire, Hoschede was an avid and informed
to the urban scenes of caillebotte. The fact that collector of works by the Impressionists,
the Impressionists were so actively concerned attending their gatherings and often
social
with the depiction of light and atmosphere inviting them imposing residence at
to his
especially recommended them to the country- Mongeron near Paris. He and his wife were
men of Van Goyen and Ruisdael, and by the especially fond of monet, who spent most of
1890s a whole group of painters, the Hague 1876 there, painting in return some decorative
School, taking as their subject the coast and the panels and landscapes. But, like a character
polders around The Hague, used Impressionist from a zola novel, Hoschede's financial deal-
techniques to recreate the mysterious light and ings were often foolhardy, if not dubious, and
atmosphere of that landscape. Typical of them in 1874 ne sold _ quite successfully - at the
were Jacob Maris (183799), J an Hendrick hotel drouot, a selection of works by pis-
Weissenbruch (1824-1903) and P.J.C. Gabriel sarro, sisley, degas and Monet. Four years
(1 828-1903). But, like other Dutch painters later he became bankrupt, and his entire
who came close to Impressionism, they were far collection was auctioned. It consisted of 6
too preoccupied with the Romantic notion of works by manet, 16 by Monet, 13 by Sisley and
individual expression and feeling to follow 9 by Pissarro, and duranty described the sale as
with any rigour the basically pragmatic explo- a disaster.
ration of vision that was at the heart of the The Hoschedes then decided to share
movement; and the whole Dutch school Monet's home giverny and established
at
veered, happily in the long run, towards the themselves there with their six children. The
more self-indulgent gratifications of Expres- position became increasingly ambiguous after
sionism. See also antecedents, astruc [ 68, 174] the death of Monet's wife Camille in 1879, and
P. Haesaerts, Histoire de la peinture moderne en may, at least in part, have been responsible for
Flandre (n.d.) Monet's lack of contact with his fellow Impres-
sionistsduring the 1880s a suggestion put
Honfleur This Channel resort and the country- forward in a scurrilous article in Le Gaullois in
side around it became so popular as a haunt for January 1880. Hoschede left Giverny to pursue
painters that it was known as the 'barbizon of what has been described as 'an impecunious
Normandy', bazille, who stayed there in 1864, bachelor life' in Paris. In 1882 he published
wrote enthusiastically to his parents, 'As soon as mon voyage au Salon, the cover of
Impressions de
we arrived in Honfleur, we looked for land- which was illustrated by a painting by Manet,
109
1
Hotel Drouot
precedent set by daubigny the previous year, LOL;s XII BT L: OXARD 'DEVIXCI .
ARSEKE HO !S*1
when he had arranged a successful auction of his LA GRECE ol LEXPOSITIOS HESKV HOUSSAYE.
own works. They were joined in the venture by LE <BOIS DE 'BOUI OGXE
LA LITTERATL'RE > L EXPOSITION
THEOPHILE GALTIER.
CHARLES (.0L!.:N1
j
Berthe morisot, and the auction took place on 1 TOtSIE: LA CROIX TO' GLN1E A. DE UMARTIKE!
economic situation. By 1900, for instance, readers, he should mention neither pissarro,
works by Pissarro were reaching 10,000 francs, seen as an anarchist, nor cezanne, seen as a
those by Sisley 15,000 francs - and on one madman. [22g]
occasion 43,000 francs (Tavernier sale, 6 March) G. Ballas, 'Paul Cezanne et la revue "L'Ar-
and by 19 12 Manet's The Music Lesson, which tiste"', in Gazette des Beaux-Arts (Dec. 198 1)
in
Huysmans, Joris-Karl
Huysmans, Joris-Karl (i 848-1907) was a found form, the Impressionists did not devote
French novelist of Dutch extraction who spent much time or attention to the field of illus-
most of his life in Pans. His early works were in tration. This reluctance was fortified by the fact
the realist tradition, but his fame rests largely that, in France especially, the immense demand
on .4 Rebours and La-bas, both written and for illustrations, by the spectacular
created
published by the 1890s. which became virtual growth in the number of papers, magazines and
bibles of the so-called 'decadent' movement, books, had tostered the evolution of specialists
lauding as they did the pursuit of every kind of in this field, men such as Gavarni. Dore and
possible experience, every form of sensual self- Constantin guys. In a conversation with gas-
indulgence. He was a prolific writer on many QUET, cezanne emphasized another aspect of
subjects and a percipient art critic, who did the problem: 'When one writes underneath a
much to support and publicize the Impression- figure what it thinks and what it does, that is an
ists. His L' Art modeme (1883) was a collection of admission that its thoughts or its actions have
his articles on the salons and the impressionist not been translated into line and colour. . . .
exhibitions, and his book Certains (1889), a Painting is first and foremost a matter of the
collection of miscellaneous articles and reviews. visual. The content of our art is what our eyes
contains, amongst other pieces about art. an think.' On the other hand, there were temp-
especially astute study of CEZANNE. He was one tations to turn to illustration, either because of
of the first to applaud the works of cassatt. but literary likes and connections, or for financial
in his early comments on the Impressionists was reasons.
apt to criticize those who did not choose The rediscovery of etching in the middle of
"modern" subjects; he therefore inclined to the the century was, of course, a powerful incentive
degas camp, though he himself deplored the (see prints). It was bracquemond who made
outbreaks of internecine warfare that spasmodi- the medium popular amongst the younger
cally agitated the movement. He even objected artists. In 1852 the publisher Alphonse Cadart,
to the fact that the girls in renoir's Dejeutier des who was an important influence in the etching
canotiers(1881; Phillips Collection, Wash- revival, published Bracquemond's series Huit
ington) were not 'fresh and Parisian enough' La Fontaine, and when,
sujets tires des fables de
and looked more like 'prostitutes imported seven years later, the goncourt
brothers pub-
from London". lished their book on the art of the 18th c. it was
Huysmans' approach to art was literary illustrated with their own etchings. In 1862
rather than visual, and it took him some baudelaire published an article entitled 'L'Eau-
considerable time fully to appreciate the visual forte a la mode", in which he praised at great
aims and technical innovations of the Impres- length the etchings of legros and mentioned
sionists; but he was always on the side of the manet's etching The Spanish Singer of i86061
new and the innovative, being especially quick, (part of an album also published by Cadart).
for instance, to appreciate and analyse the Manet had, indeed, been influenced by
idiosyncratic art ot Odilon Redon. which popular illustrations in his painting, in which
indeed had affinities with his own. See also there are frequent echoes from such successful
literature, moreau. raffaelli [12S, 162] publications as the Magasin pittoresque and Les
= J.-K. Huysmans. Oenvres completes (1928), Francais peints par eux-memes. In 1869 he pro-
esp. vol. VI: U. Finke, French Nineteenth- duced a lithograph of the execution of the
Century Painting and Literature (1972) Emperor Maximilian, but its publication was
forbidden by the government because, accord-
ing to ZOLA, who published a bitter attack on
this piece of censorship, the uniforms of the
soldiers gave the impression that they were
French. In 1875 Manet produced six litho-
graphs for mallarme's translation of Edgar
Allan Poe's The Raven, and a year later four
small wood-engravings for the same author's
L'Apres-midi (fun faune.
degas, who might seem the most likely to
Illustration Primarily concerned with paint- have indulged in illustration, does not seem to
ing, as the medium in which their innovations have been greatly attracted by the idea, though
Impressionism
113
Impressionism
It was Monet's view of Le Havre, Impression; Sunrise (1872), which led the critic Leroy to coin the term
Impressionism.
lengthwise as there are fingers, and the business Despite the reluctance of both renoir and
is done. Stupid people who are finicky about degas to approve of the concept of a group, and
the drawing of a hand don't understand a thing despite the fact that zola (possibly more
about Impressionism, and great Manet would accurately) continued to call them naturalistes,
chase them out of his republic.' Leroy's word stuck, and within a year it was
The reference to Manet is significant, indicat- even appearing in the USA, in an article written
ing a realization amongst the art-conscious by Henry james, as part of the accepted
public that there was a more or less coherent language of the art world. Nor was it without a
group of painters who - though they had issued kind of implicit approval within the group.
no manifesto, published no programme, and monet had selected for the exhibition of 1 874 a
had described themselves in the exhibition held painting of Le Havre, with the sun appearing
at nadar's old studio as a Societe anonyme des through the mists outlining the masts of ships
artistes, peintres, sculpteurs, graveurs, etc. - shared and the general view of the harbour. He later
certain things in common, including a leader, recorded, 'I was asked to give a title for the
forced into that role presumably because of the catalogue. I couldn't very welljust call it "View
publicity engendered by his Dejeuner sur I'herbe of Le Havre", so I said, put Impression.' Leroy,
of 1 863 The existence of such a group had been
. therefore, although he gave the name wide
indicated by the fact that they were from time exposure, did have some justification from
to time known as the 'batignolles group', or within the ranks of the exhibitors. So far,
even Japanese', on the assumption that,
as 'the indeed, was the name eventually accepted, that
because there was a craze for things Japanese by the time of the third exhibition in 1877 they
amongst the artistically 'advanced', all art styles were calling themselves impressionists'
that did not conform to the academic were (though in the fourth exhibition of 1879 they
influenced by that cultural tradition. took the name independants').
114
Impressionist exhibitions
One thing is certain, that the creation of a Archives de I'lmpressionnisme, 2 vols. (1939 and
group name polarized attitudes amongst them- 1968), the catalogues recorded the following
selves, and amongst the general public, which exhibitors and details:
came to use the word Impressionist almost as a
synonym for 'modern'. In fact, when a play 1874 Societe anonyme des artistes, peintres, sculp-
115
. .
L'impressionniste
1886 8e. Exposition de peinture, par Mme Marie DU FIGARO En 1877, 1'expositiou a un
credi, tout le
immense
succesj mep-
monde a repondu avec empreeaement
Bracquemond, Mile Mary Cassatt, MM. a 1'invitation des exposanta. Ses sympathies etaient
Lorsqa*U y * quelques annt^esVnn groupe dS-' triatewB quei-ai lifte WTWpi e. ri d ettlet at 4djew
i
en dehors du
Sappel, YHommc Mm et quelquea autres, les
Pissarro, Odilon Redon, Rouart, schuffe- ,qm' furent lancee dans leurs recrimina-
i cherchaient
necker, Seurat, Signac, Tillot, Vignon, Zando- dans Tart quelqua chose que persoane n'avait Dans le Figaro, entre autres critique est
aoupcoDaa. A cette epoque, lesjouroaux aTaienl ]es digne de rhomme de talent qui
meneghi. 1 rue Laffitte (corner of the boulevard
1
neurs deleqr eMe ; cette peinlareetait tout autre que Je ne fais pas
crime a ces messieurs de ne pas
&:,
aait
to ub les
(S,S^
'
La seconds exposition fat aalneeparlee menus Cet dans leur intertt que je dis cela, c'eat^iour
exclamation! 4* la part de la preaee. M. Wolff, qui rhoaneur de la presse francaise est reeilcment
In all eight exhibitions, the main figures of the a de* pretentioE deplorable de donner an monde
II
ce spectacle inoui
, contre deagens de
idioteo, maiadroaea
talent, etjuste
et hai-
an mo-
number of works (the figures in brackets mant o4 le ancces caaronne leurs efforts
. CarwwcJioaereiBirqnablec'eatqaol^praaaeeat
indicate works that were 'on loan', either tosjonri en retard. Au Hen degaider le public, elle
attendance figures at all the exhibitions. The from Renoir, and was so patently a propaganda
first attracted the modest total of 3500 over a publication that its impact must have been
complete month, but in 1876 Caillebotte minimal.
boasted that 500 people a day were visiting the The first issue contained a letter to the editor
exhibition in the rue Le Peletier. In 1879 of Figaro, bitterly attacking Wolff, and in that
admission fees and so forth brought in a total of of 14 April another onslaught was directed
10,500 francs, enabling the exhibitors to receive against such diverse publications as Le Sports-
a share-out of 439 francs each. See also critics, man and La Petite Republique francaise, whilst the
l'impressionniste, independants, societe Petit Parisien was praised for its sympathetic
anonyme des artistes, l'union [206] review by a writer with the unlikely name of
Venturi, vol. 2 (1939); Denvir (1987) 'M. Flor O'Squarr'. One issue contained a very
spirited and convincing defence of cezanne,
L'impressionniste Right from the begin- and Renoir got an even larger share of the
nings of the Impressionist movement there had laudatory bouquets that were handed out to all
been talk of publishing a paper or magazine to of the group. An unexpected amount of space
expound the views of the group, and on the was given to a letter and, subsequently (in the
occasion of the third exhibition in 1877 renoir last issue), an article attacking contemporary
took up the project more vigorously, partly as a architectural decoration, especially on the new
consequence of the very hostile attacks by buildings of the Louvre and the Opera, and
Albert wolff in Figaro. He succeeded in lavishing praise on Les Halles.
persuading Georges riviere to start a weekly Riviere rather ineptly defined impressionism
journal, L'impressionniste; journal d'art, which as an art form that contained no historical,
appeared on Thursdays and ran for four issues biblicalor oriental subject-matter, a notion
from the 6 until the 28 April. It was mostly which, though true enough, hardly got to the
written by Riviere himself, with obvious help heart of the matter.
116
Italy
local police were constantly being called in to royalist connotations. With the restoration,
settle fights in the exhibition hall, or to arrest however, the name of Academie was re-applied
members for assault. By 9 June things had got so to the constituent parts, and the body as a whole
bad that a meeting of all the members was called came to be known as the Institut.
with Redon in the chair. By the middle of the 19th c. the Beaux-Arts
A new body was legally constituted two days section consisted of 40 members with a perpe-
later, with the title La Societe des Artistes tual secretary; main functions were to look
its
Independants, with the aim of 'the suppression after the Schools of Fine Art in Paris and Rome,
of juries, and allowing artists freely to present and 'to amend and correct those matters that fall
their works for the judgment of public opi- within its province; it cautions or requests help
nion'. It was to survive and become one of the from the governmental authority to which it
constituent elements of the French art world. owes many benefits in the world of art'.
At its first exhibition in December 1884, Whereas under the ancien regime the main
guillaumin, as well as Seurat, Signac and purpose of the fine arts academy had been to
Gauguin's friend schuffenecker, took part. By enhance the status of the artist and secure
1890 it had become the main showcase for the support for his work, by the 19th c. the
work of Gauguin, cezanne and all the varying emphasis had changed to teaching, with all the
strands of post-impressionism, including the imposition of stylistic uniformity that this
works of the Douanier Rousseau. In 1891 the implied (see academic art). See also besnard,
exhibition contained a small memorial show, ECOLE DES BEAUX-ARTS, GEROME
arranged by Signac, to van gogh, who had Boime (1986)
killed himself in July. The name of the group
must not be confused with that which, on Italy The most obvious link between the Imp-
degas' suggestion, the Impressionists had first ressionistsand Italy was degas, who was a mem-
used to describe themselves. See also societe ber of an Italian family which had a palazzo in
ANONYME DES ARTISTES Naples and a country residence near Capo di
Rewald (1973); J. Rewald, Post-Impressionism Monte. His father's sister married Gennaro
(1956) bellelli, who had been forced to leave Naples
in 1849 as a consequence of his involvement in
Institut de France The combination of the the revolt against the Bourbons, in which
five academies created by Richelieu in the 17th Degas' cousin, Gustavo Morbilli, had been
c, consisting of the Academie Francaise shot. The painter had an almost tribal loyalty to
117
Italy
Italy: Silvestro Lega's The Pergola of 1868 is reminiscent of Bazille's The Artist's Family on a Terrace near
Montpellier, painted in the same year.
118
James, Henry
Collection, Florence) is very closely based on cal. When acceptance finally came in the early
Manet's Jeanne, Spring (1882), which had a part of the 20th c. it was due, in part at least, to
considerable success at the Salon;it was repro- the Venice Biennale, inaugurated in 1895,
duced on the cover of Ernest hoschede's which began to show an number of
increasing
Impressions de mon voyage au Salon of 1882 and, Impressionist works, culminating in a one-man
in a more widely disseminated form, as an renoir exhibition in 19 10. See also antece-
dents, VENTURI [30, 110, I36, 153, l8l, 230]
n R. Longhi, 'L'Impressionismo e il gusto degli
italiani', intro. to Italian trans, of J. Rewald,
J
Italy: Degas' copy of Mantegna's Crucifixion (1456- James, Henry (1 843-1916) American writer
59) in the Louvre, which he painted in 186869. and novelist, educated in New York, London,
119
Japanese art
120
Jongkind, Johann Barthold
Japanese prints are featured in Manet's portrait by means of a fragment.' See also antecedents,
of Zola. Monet had a large collection of prints - BURTY, DURET, IMPRESSIONISM, PERSPECTIVE,
still to be seen at giverny, where he decorated PHOTOGRAPHY [47, 65, l6l , 210, 212, 223, 224]
his dining room with white damask cloth C.F. Ives, The Great Wave: the influence of
covered with Japanese designs - and between Japanese woodcuts on French prints (1974); Japo-
1875 and 1876 he painted Lajaponaise (Museum nisme; Japanese influence on French art, 1854 igio,
of Fine Arts, Boston), in which the Japanese- Cleveland Museum of Art, Ohio, exhibition
element is confined to the dress and the pose. He catalogue (1975); J. Dufwa, Winds from the East.
laterdescribed the picture as 'rubbish', and A Study in the Art of Manet, Degas, Monet and
Renoir was clearly also embarrassed by the Whistler 1856-86 (198 1); M. Eidelberg, 'Brac-
oriental background he introduced into his quemond, Delatre and the Discovery of Japa-
portrait of Madame Charpentier and her Children nese Prints', Burlington Magazine (April 1981)
(1878; Metropolitan Museum, New York).
On and technical level, however,
a creative Jongkind, Johann Barthold (18 1991) Born
the Japanese impact was far more significant, at Latrop near Rotterdam, he studied art at The
though it would be more accurate to describe it Hague and was awarded a scholarship that
as providing reinforcement for explorations allowed him to move to paris in 1843. Here he
and innovations to which most of the Impres- met Eugene-Gabriel Isabey, who had a con-
sionists had already addressed themselves, siderable influence on him. Particularly
rather than as an 'influence'. A concern with attracted to painting the Dutch and French
depicting contemporary, often urban life; very coasts, he was a frequent visitor to honfleur,
close-up viewpoints; a dynamic tension where he came into contact with boudin,
between figures and space; the cutting off of monet and others. With Monet he established a
figures and objects by the margins of the lasting friendship which was of mutual benefit.
picture; the use of devices such as bridges to He was also close to courbet, corot and Alfred
introduce the spectator into the pictorial space; Stevens. He had his first work accepted at the
the delicately skilful contrast between blank salon in 1848 and received a medal for his
and worked-over spaces; the use of sinuously contribution to that of 1852. After several visits
definitive lines: all these were aspects that the to Holland, he finally settled in Paris in i860,
Impressionists found in the art of the Japanese, but was bedevilled by problems. Afflicted with
and all were aspects that either extended or a profound persecution neurosis, he was for
confirmed their own innovations. some considerable time an alcoholic, and was
They were influenced in varying degrees, but nearly always on the verge of penury, though
the most clearly discernible reactions are in the his artist friends were especially supportive of
compositions of Monet, and in the technical him, for he seems to have had a particularly
devices and choice of subject-matter in many of engaging personality. He exhibited at the
the works of Degas, who was especially sus- salon des refuses in 1 863, and made visits to
ceptible to the world of courtesans, actors and Honfleur in 1864 and 1865, when he was
dancers depicted in the transitory world of the temporarily relieved of his psychological
masters of Ukiyo-e. It is also worth noting that problems by a moustachioed harridan (accord-
many of the popular Japanese prints shared ing to the goncourts), who looked after him
stylistic characteristics with those popular with tender affection. His paintings also began
French prints, the Images d'Epinal, which had to have a modest financial success, and in 1878
influenced courbet and, through him, Manet. he moved to Cote-Saint-Andre near Grenoble,
Although Japanese art had no discernible where he lived for the rest of his life, apart from
influence on Renoir or cezanne, there was occasional excursions to Paris and Provence. In
enough evidence of it in the work of their 1889, however, he had a relapse into his old
colleagues for the batignolles group to be afflictions, and died in the asylum of Saint-
known as 'the Japanese of painting'. According Rambert near Grenoble.
to castagnary in an article he wrote for Le castagnary said of him i love this fellow
Siecle in April 1874, Monet reflected a general Jongkind; he is an artist to his fingertips. I find in
sentiment when he said 'Their refinement of him a rare and delicate sensibility. With him
taste has always pleased me, and I approve of everything lies in the impression (article in
their aesthetic doctrine which evokes the pres- l' artiste, 1863). There can be no doubt that he
ence of something by a shadow; and the whole had a profound influence on many of the
121
Joyant, Maurice
Jongkind's seascape La Ciotat was painted in 1880. The influence of his work on Monet is clearly apparent.
122
Lane, Sir Hugh Percy
sition Uni verselle held in Paris in 1855, and after member of the group consisting of Verlaine,
acting as ambassador first to Athens and then St Rimbaud and Lautreamont. The writer Paul
Petersburg, he returned to Paris in a private Bourget secured him a post as reader to the
capacity, becoming one of its most colourful Kaiser's grandmother, and while in Germany
residents and building up an enormous but he saw an exhibition of Impressionist paintings,
heterogeneous art collection. about which he wrote a most illuminating
He had been initiated into the art world by study; it appeared in his posthumous works
his mistress, Jeanne de Tourbey, Comtesse de published in Paris in 1900.
Loynes, who was a friend of Sainte-Beuve, J. Laforgue, Oeuvres completes (1925); J.U.
Flaubert, Renan and other leading French Halperin, Felix Feneon; Aesthete and Anarchist in
writers. Through them she got to know Fin-de-Siecle Paris (i<
man-about-town, but eventually returned to in the 1877 exhibition, but by the 1880s had lost
the Middle East to pursue his political ideals, contact with the movement. [187]
and died there of syphilis, apparently con- E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs,
tracted in Russia. dessinateurs et graveurs (1966); Rewald (1973)
F. Haskell, Past and Present in Art and Taste
(1987) Lane, Sir Hugh Percy (1875-1915) One of
the first of the few great British collectors of
Impressionism, he started buying from dur-
and-ruel in 1905, intending to build up a
collection of modern French art for a public art
123
Latouche, Louis
influential characters in Second Empire society Le Coeur, Jacques (1832-82) Son of a success-
- a role he owed he was dentist to
to the fact that ful architect, and himself trained as an architect,
the imperial family. he decided to become a painter and in 1865 met
124
Legros, Alphonse
125
Lepic, Vicomte Ludovic-Napoleon
Manet's Luncheon in the Studio of 1868 portrays Leon LeenhofF- also shown in the photograph, right in
his putative father's studio. Faure is seated on the right of the painting.
boisbaudran, he had some considerable success was very dubious about his teaching methods,
at the salon, and several of his works were especially when
lucien, his son, was working
bought by the state. In 1863, however, he under him. Legros' own paintings were rather
participated in the salon des refuses, partly sentimental genre scenes (The Angelus, 1859;
under the influence of his friend whistler. He Musee d'Orsay). See also illustration, prints,
came to London in the same year and taught SICKERT [23]
first at the South Kensington School of Fine Art L. Benedite, Alphonse Legros (1900); A.
and then at the Slade, where he exerted a great Salaman, Legros (1926)
influence on those artists who were to become
the nucleus of the New English Art Club (see Lepic, Vicomte Ludovic-Napoleon (1839
England). Although he could in no way be 89) Painter and engraver, he participated in the
thought of as an Impressionist, on the invitation first and second impressionist exhibitions,
of degas he participated in the second impres- having met monet and bazille at the atelier
sionist exhibition and was an invaluable gleyre, and became very friendly with degas,
contact between Paris and London in the caillebotte, in a letter to pissarro in January
dissemination of Impressionist ideas, pissarro 1 88 1 commented 'Lepic, heaven knows, has no
,
126
Literature
He became very friendly with both degas and Impression, Soleil levant. r>
renoir, buying their works on an impressive Impression, j'en etais sur. Je me disais aussi, puisque
je suis impressionne, il doit y avoir de l'impression la-
scale and commissioning Renoir in 1896 to dedans... El quelle liberie, quelle aisance dans la facture!
paint portraits of his two daughters, Yvonne Le papier peint a l'etat embryonnaire est encore plus fait
and Christine. In one of these two works by quo cette marine-la
Cependant qu'auraient dit Michalon, Bidault, Boisse-
Degas are featured; in the other, a work by lier et Berlin devant cette toile impressionnante?
Renoir and two by Degas appear. The two Ne me parlez pas de ces hideux croutons ! hurla le
Palais, Paris, exhibition catalogue (i< de chateau a Sannois, de M. Ottin, tres- lumineuse et tres-
fine mais I'horrible l'attirait.La blanchisseuse, si mal blan-
;
illustrated by himself. He had already launched faux dieux de Meissonnier. Trop fait, trop fait, trop fait !...
an attack on manet's Bullfighter when it was ParlPz-moi do la Moderne O/ympia, a la bonne lieurr!
Helas! allez la voir, celle-la! Une femme pliee en deux
shown in the salon of 1864. [114]
a qui une negrosso enlevo le dernier voile pour 1'offrir
Hamilton (1954); E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des dai:s toute sa laideur aux regards charmes d'un fantocho
peintres, sculpteurs, dessinateurs et graveurs (1966); brun. Vous vous souvenez de I'Olympia, de M. Manet?
Eh bien, c'etait un chef-d'oeuvre ao dessin, de correction,
Rewald (1973) de flni, comparee a celle do M. Cezanne.
EnQn le vase deborda. Le cerveau cla^sique du pere Vin-
Lhermitte, Leon (1 844-1925) A pupil of cent, attaque de trop de cdtes a la fois, se detraqua com-
pletemont. s'arreta devant le gardicn do Paris qui veillo
lecoq de boisbaudran, he built up a reputation II
famous, too, for his decorative paintings. Using De face il a deux yeux... et un nez... et une bouche !... Ce
ne sont pas les lmpressionnistes qui auraient ainsi sacrifie
a sometimes vaguely Impressionist technique, au detail. Avec ce que lo peintre a depense d'inutilites
he was invited to exhibit at the 1879 Impressio- dans cette figure, Monet eat fait vingt gardiens de Paris!
nist exhibition, though he did not do so, and his Si vous circuliez un peu, vous, lui dit le portrait,
millet. He was in fairly close contact with Et pour donner a son esthetique tout lo serieux conve-
nable, le pere Vincent se mit a danser la danse du scalp
degas in the period between 1879 and 1883.
devant le gardien ahuri, en criant d'une voix etranglee :
127
Literature
EDMOND DE GONCOURT
MANETTE
SALOMON
PIECE EN NEUF TABLEAUX
Tirce du Roman
PARIS
G. CHARPENTIER et E. FASQUELLE, editeurs
11, RUE DE CRENELLC, 11
Literature: Degas' Miss La La an cirque Femandc Literature: the title page of E. de Goncourt's play
1879, was described in a story by Huysmans. about the life of artists under the Second Empire.
Above all others in his bringing together of word which he himself would reject in his daily
art and was Stephane mallarme. The
literature conversation'; but Degas was too prickly in his
friend of Manet, about whom he wrote an social relations and, failing tounderstand Mal-
article, 'The Impressionists and Edouard larme's later work, gradually distanced himself
Manet', in the London magazine Art Monthly from the poet. Paul Valery, who was part of the
Review and Photographic Folio (30 September Mallarme circle, also had a great admiration for
1876), he himself translated whistler's Ten Degas: 'This man gives me infinite pleasure', he
o'clock Lecture into French, and Manet illus- wrote to Andre Gide in 1886, 'and not only in
trated his translation of Poe's The Raven. His his paintings. He has such an intelligent air.' He
portrait was painted by Manet, Whistler, was anxious to dedicate one of his works to
gauguin and Edvard Munch. His Tuesday him, but Degas turned down the request.
night salons in his flat at 89 rue de Rome Degas' relationship to literature is extremely
brought together many painters and writers of interesting and, though it cannot be taken as
differing allegiances, including the Impressio- typical, it reflects the intimacy and the com-
nists (among them morisot, to whom he was plexity of the connections between the Impres-
especially attached), and others such as Strind- sionists and contemporary writers. He himself
berg, George moore, Redon and moreau. wrote a number of sonnets, and was involved in
degas was, for a considerable period, a close active collaboration with Ludovic halevy on
friend of Mallarme and took a remarkably fine La Famille Cardinal (1 880) and the stage produc-
photograph of him and Renoir in front of a tion of La Cigale in 1877. Degas' early works
mirror, which reflects the photographer him- abound in literary themes, but they are mostly
self, as well as Mallarme's wife and daughter. of a romantic or historical nature. By the 1870s
The poet had written about Degas' work, 'He is he had become fascinated by realist writers such
a master of a new abstract form, if I may use a as duranty, zola, the goncourts and HUYS-
128
Literature
mans, echoes of whose works are to be found in was with Zola, but his
closest literary contact
hisown. On the other hand, however, although own correspondence reveals a person with a
he knew Daudet and Maupassant well, he does wider and deeper interest in literature than
not seem to have been influenced by their might be supposed. At school he wrote poetry
writings or attitudes in any way. In his choice of extensively, and throughout his life his favour-
themes, and in his rather disdainful realism, ite books were the Eclogues of Virgil and
other way. There are several passages in the creative consciousness of Europe away from the
earlier novels of Huysmans which, though they escapism of the Romantic approach to a more
purport to be descriptions of incidents or objective, 'scientific' observation of the actual
situations, are actually verbal transcriptions of world, and to a preference for themes taken
paintings. In one of his Croquis parisiens of 1880, from the everyday life of ordinary people,
for instance, there is an account of an acrobatic rather than from the past, or from an idealized
act at the Folies-Bergere which is based entirely society, realism, or Naturalism, as it was
on Degas' Miss La La au cirque Fernando (1879; variously called, was to be found in the
National Gallery, London). Impressionists' concern with representing
The literary interests of all the Impressionists natural phenomena not as they were concep-
were very pronounced. Renoir, whose letters tualized in the mind, but as they were actually
are marked by a strong sense of style, wrote in seen by the eye, and in their preoccupation with
191 an extensive introduction to a new transla-
1 scenes of ordinary, rather than idyllic, life; these
tion of Cennino Cennini's II Lihro dell' Arte, concerns were also at the heart of the writings of
which contained wide-ranging reflections on Duranty, the Goncourts, George Moore and
many matters, including Catholicism, of which above all Zola.
by that time he had become a warm defender. Zola's connection with the Impressionists
Monet had an extensive library at giverny and and ardent support for them has long been
amongst his favourite authors were Zola, accepted as an outstanding example of the
Flaubert, Maupassant, Maeterlinck, Huysmans correlation of art and literature. He himself
and Balzac. Flaubert, who lived near Giverny, emphasized this constantly; he used the words
was sensitive to many of the Impressionists' impressionniste, naturaliste and actualiste to mean
ideas, and it is significant that in L'Education the same thing, and wrote, 'The old masters of
sentimentale (1869) he has the artist Pellerin the future will be our brothers, who will have
working on a painting entitled The Republic, accomplished the task of bringing into art that
Progress or Civilization, which shows Christ movement which in literature has led to a
driving a railway engine through a virgin forest precise analysis and a questing study of the
- a gesture towards the concept of making present.' It was not quite as simple as Zola's
modern life a suitable theme for art. Monet first quest for a persuasive ideology suggested,
met Maupassant, who was a frequent visitor to however. A concern with the present was not
Berthe Morisot's Thursday dinner parties, at the dominant concern of Impressionism, and in
etretat in 1 88 5, and the writer published a some ways Zola did not really understand its
vivid account of Monet's painting a seascape in specifically pictorial dynamism. Nor were the
Gil Bias on 28 September 1886, in a piece Impressionists united in their approval of his
entitled 'La Vie d'un paysagiste'. Cezanne's sometimes tediously statistical analysis of life in
129
Louveciennes
130
Maitre, Edmond
the town of Villeneuve-sur-Lot, where it was directorfirst of the Tate Gallery and then of the
consigned to a cellar in the Mairie, languishing Wallace Collection. His major publication was
there until the 1960s. A similar fate overtook Nineteenth-Century Art (1902).
jongkind's Harbour at Honfleur, which was His preferences were clearly for the 'realists'
acquired in 1851 and immediately transferred of the group - manet and degas especially -
to the museum of Amiens. During the latter and, though he helped to organize a fund for the
half of the century the most 'advanced' paint- purchase of a monet for the National Gallery,
ings owned by the Luxembourg were by he did nothing to acquire any Impressionist
millet,daubigny and corot, who in 1875 had works during the time he ran the Tate Gallery.
bequeathed two of his Italian landscapes to the On the other hand, the consistent bias of his
museum. critical writing was towards an understanding
The extent to which the museum was and appreciation of contemporary, especially
hamstrung by bureaucracy and political com- French, art.
plications is exemplified by the debacle of the D.S. MacColl, Nineteenth-Century Art (1902);
CAILLEBOTTE bequest. The collection was left to Cooper (1954); Dictionary of National Biogra-
the Luxembourg, but part of it was rejected for phy (1970)
lack of space, the balance being shown in 1897
in a newly built annexe of the museum. In Maitre, Edmond (1840-98) Writer and
giving his Nympheas series to the nation in 1920, musician, he was deeply interested in art,
monet was very concerned that the pictures largely through his friendship with bazille,
should not hang in the Luxembourg, and who portrayed him playing the piano in The
eventually in 1922 they were installed in the Artist's Studio, rue de la Condamine (1870; Musee
Orangerie of the Louvre, thanks to the inter- d'Orsay), and painted a portrait of him in 1867
vention of clemenceau. In 1902 GAUGUIN, (Madame Cardenal Collection, Bordeaux). He
smarting under the rejection of his D'ou venons- is also to be seen standing next to zola in
M
Macchiaioli see italy
131
.
Mallarme, Stephane
other friends were baudelaire, lecoq de influence with Henry Roujon, the Director of
boisbaudran and Verlaine. An habitue of the Fine Arts, to ensure that the state bought
cafe guerbois, he also became very friendly Whistler's Portrait of the Artist's Mother, as well
with renoir, who shared with him a passion for as a work by Morisot. He was on close terms
Wagner and, indeed, for German music in with renoir and degas, who took a memorable
general. See also music [28, 86] photograph of the former with the poet. See
A. Jullien, Fantin-Latour (1909); G. Poulain, also CALLIAS, ILLUSTRATION, LAURENT, LITERA-
Bazille et ses amis (1932) TURE, PHOTOGRAPHY, RAFFAELLI [113]
Correspondance de Berthe Morisot, ed. D.
Mallarme, Stephane (184298) One of those Rouart, (1950); Mallarme, Correspondance,
S.
charismatic literary figures of the kind that vol. 3, ed. H. Mondor and J.L. Austin (1969);
France produces so abundantly, Mallarme was a }. A. Lloyd, 'Mallarme and the visual arts', in
painter in words, whose very personal style was French Nineteenth-Century Painting and Litera-
influenced by writers such as baudelaire, Poe ture, ed. U. Finke (1972)
and the Parnassians. His flat on the rue de Rome
in batignolles became a centre of Parisian Manet, Edouard (1832-83) The virtually
cultural life, and his connections with artists reluctant of the Impressionists, who
leader
were close and mutually fruitful, manet painted never participated in their exhibitions, he was
his portrait (1876; Musee d'Orsay) and illus- nearly 50 before he adopted a truly Impressio-
trated his translation of Poe's The Raven and nist technique, largely under the influence of
L'Apres-midi d'unfaune. For his part, Mallarme monet and morisot. The son of a magistrate, he
wrote brilliantly in defence of Manet, whistler clearly belonged to the ranks of the haute
and morisot, and persuaded Octave mirbeau to bourgeoisie, a fact underlined by his immacu-
champion the works of gauguin. In 1876 he lately correct dress and behaviour, as well as by
published an article on 'The Impressionists and his early years as an eligible and frivolous
Edouard Manet' in the short-lived London bachelor given to the pursuit of 'high life'.
publication, Art Monthly Review. He used his Manet was, next to pissarro, the most radical,
or at least the most politically sceptical, member
of the group of artists with whom he was
connected; and yet he was terribly hungry for
official recognition, complaining bitterly to
nieuwerkerke, whose successor as Director of
Fine Arts had procured the Legion of Honour
for him, 'It would have made my fortune once,
but now it is too late to make up for 20 years of
failure.' One of his earliest ambitions was to
obtain a commission to decorate one of the
ceilings of the newly renovated Hotel de Ville,
and, in the catalogue of the one-man exhibition
he mounted in 1867, in connection with the
Exposition Universelle of that year, Zacharie
astruc wrote (presumably at the artist's dic-
tation), 'M. Manet has never wished to protest
. he has no intention to overthrow old
.
132
Manet, Edouard
Photograph of Manet taken by Nadar c. 1869. to the Salon. It was rejected, but shown in the
salon des refuses. The scandal that ensued is
now part of the folklore of art history and it
established Manet securely, and for him
about the Revolution of 1789.' Financially uncomfortably, in the position of leader of the
independent, he was not harassed or motivated anti-establishment faction in the French art
as Monet or Pissarro were, neither turning out world. The irony of the situation, typical in a
works in such abundance as they, nor being way of Manet's whole career, was that the
over-attentive to dealers. Indeed, his persistent picture had no offensive or revolutionary
concern with getting his works into the salon intention. It was based, in fact, on a classical
was dictated by a desire for recognition rather theme, with obvious references noted at the
than to enhance his sales. Clearly, he possessed time - to Giorgione, Raimondi and Raphael.
what a later generation would describe as The nude figure was far less sexually provoca-
charisma. Despite the rows he had with others, tive than many academic paintings, such as, for
the worst that was ever said of him by degas instance, Cabanel's Birth of Venus (1863; Musee
was that he was a bourgeois. Younger artists d'Orsay), admired and bought by napoleon hi.
clustered naturally around him, and a number What horrified the establishment was the fact
of students at the ecole des beaux-arts invited that Manet had transferred the situation out of
him in vain, of course to take over the anodyne atmosphere of a fictitious, idyllic
Lehmann's atelier. A student song of the time past into the world of 1863, and so proclaimed
went: 'Courbet, Manet, tous ceux qui ont genie / himself as a realist a movement that in its
N'ontpas la Croix, $a degoute de la vie' (Courbet, literary and artistic idioms was widely regarded
Manet and all those others who have genius do as aesthetically repulsive and politically suspect.
not get the cross of the Legion of Honour. It's The same paradox was apparent in the hostile
enough to make one sick of life). reception given to his Olympia (1863; Musee
The juxtaposition of Manet's name with that d'Orsay), which was exhibited at the Salon of
of courbet is in fact significant, because both 1865, and which was in effect a translation into
were forced, the one willingly, the other less so, contemporary idiom of a theme - that of the
133
Manet, Edouard
Manet's Olympia caused an uproar when it was exhibited at the 1865 Salon, his notoriety causing him to be
seen as the unofficial leader of the avant-garde.
recumbent Venus which was virtually a cliche and pupil, except that the influence went both
amongst the painters of the late Renaissance. ways; and the connection was strengthened in
Manet's work at this time was marked by 1874 when she married Manet's brother
considerable technical virtuosity (see peinture Eugene. By this time Manet was becoming
claire), by an unemotional realism that owed reasonably successful, and the impulses that
much to theSpanish tradition, and by an Morisot had been giving him towards plein-air
interest in contemporary life; but also by certain painting and a general lightening of his palette
more innovative characteristics that help to were emphasized in 1 874, when he spent a good
explain why his paintings had such a profound deal of time painting in and around argenteuil
effect on Monet, renoir, sisley and bazille with Monet and Renoir. Works such as Monet
when they saw them at the martinet Gallery. Working in his Studio-Boat (Bayerische Staats-
Manet presented many elements in his works in gemaldesammlungen, Munich) and Argenteuil
an apparently uncomposed and arbitrary way, (Musee des Beaux-Arts, Tournai) were, so to
reproducing tonal values as a pattern of light speak, fully-fledged Impressionist works;
and shade, rather than as local colours. though the latter was accepted at the Salon of
By now, although his social life still had its 1875, it was bitterly criticized, and his works
mondaine quality, Manet was moving much were rejected there for the next few years.
more in the artistic world inhabited by people His concern with contemporary life started
such as Monet and Renoir. In the late 1860s he to assume a slightly different accent in this
met Berthe Morisot, who came from a social period, partly as the result of an interest in
context similar to his own and by whose charm Dutch genre painting, which had been streng-
and creative intelligence he was greatly thened by his marriage to the Dutch pianist
impressed. She served as his model on many Suzanne leenhhoff and his subsequent visits to
occasions, notably for The Balcony (1869; Holland. Le Bon Bock of 1873 (Philadelphia
Musee d'Orsay). They established a relation- Museum of Art), a portrait of the engraver
ship that might be described as that of master Emile Bellot, which was warmly received at the
134
Marion, Antoine Fortune
Salon, clearly owed a great deal to Frans Hals. oeuvres (1947); Manet, Metropolitan Museum,
Bellot actually used the work in an engraved New York; Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition
form on the mast-head of a paper, with the catalogue (1983); K. Adler, Manet (1986)
same title, which he published as a weekly
publication for the brewing trade - and it was Manet, Julie see morisot
this world of cafes and cabarets that now began
to attract Manet's interest. Two of his most Mantz, Paul (182195) Art critic, historian,
important works, remarkable for the brilliance man of and successful civil servant, he
letters
of their technique, the originality of their contributed articles about art to a wide variety
conception and their fluent manipulation of the of reviews, including l'artiste and Le Temps.
innovative elements of Impressionism, were He also wrote extensively for Charles blanc's
both concerned with creating a modern version Histoire des peintres. At one time he was
of the tavern life that had so beguiled the Dutch Director-General of Fine Arts. In an article in
masters of the 17th c. Corner in a Cafe-Concert the Gazette des Beaux-Arts, he praised one of
(1878 or 1879; National Gallery, London) is a monet's sea-paintings enthusiastically, writing
sparklingly painted view of the Brasserie de 'the taste for harmonious schemes of colour in
Reichshoffen; A Bar at the Folies-Bergere (Cour- the play of analogous tones, the feeling for
tauld Institute, London) is his last masterpiece, a values, the striking point of view of the whole, a
tribute on a magisterial scale to the paris of his bold manner of seeing things and of forcing the
most popular haunts
time, typified in one of its attention of the spectator. These are qualities
'that smells sweetly of the maquillage of pur- M. Monet possesses in the highest degree.
that
chased favours and the extremes of jaded cor- From now onwards we shall certainly be keen
ruption'. The great sweep of the composition is on following the progress of this painter.'
contrasted with the Chardin-like material Hamilton (1954)
intensity of the beer and champagne bottles,
and with the lyricism of the still life created out Manzi, Michel (1849-19 15) Of Italian origin,
of the flowers and oranges on the bar. and a friend of degas, he was an engraver and a
Already suffering from the disease, probably printer, who eventually became a dealer in
a kind of circulatory paralysis, that was to kill partnership with Maurice joyant. Between
him, Manet became incapable of producing 1 88 1 and 1893 he directed the shop that goupil
anything more ambitious than a series of small ran for the sale of reproductions at 9 rue
still lifes of similar quality. A master of pastel- Chaptal. In 1896 he published a remarkable
painting, he also produced about a hundred volume of reproductions of drawings by
prints, most of them after paintings, which Degas, with the artist,
in close collaboration
remained unpublished in his lifetime. They using a he had developed
technique that
were not mere reproductions, nor were they himself. He had a small but important collec-
'original' prints, like those produced by artists tion of paintings, which included works by
such as Pissarro, and he had intended them to be manet, pissarro, Degas and gauguin, and was
published. Conveniently labelled an Impressio- auctioned in 191 1.
nist, Manet transcends any such narrow cat- J. Rewald, Studies in Post-Impressionism
egorization, and his works contribute perhaps (1986); Degas, Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition
more than those of any of his fellow painters to catalogue (1988)
incorporating the movement in the mainstream
of European art. See also balleroy, batig- Marion, Antoine Fortune 846-1900) An (1
135
Marlotte
136
Medan
Italiens, where he also arranged concerts. From gauguin and morisot. He was largely respon-
186 1 to 1863 he issued a lively art magazine, the mounting these exhibitions, and the
sible for
Courrier artistique, which fought vigorously for introductions that he provided for the cata-
the salon des refuses. Predominantly inter- logues were remarkable for their lucid explana-
ested in Romantic painters, such as delacroix, tions of what the Impressionists were trying to
he actively promoted the work of currently achieve. He was especially interested in
neglected i8th-c. painters, including Watteau problems concerning the depiction of light and
and Chardin, and it was possibly through his colour. He was also a protagonist of Wagner,
gallery thatManet absorbed their influence, and of progressive music in general. See also
which is most apparent in his work between BELGIUM, JOYANT [2g]
1865 and 1872. Martinet's etching activities M.O. Maus, Trente annees de lutte pour I'art,
must have stimulated Manet at this time to join 1884 igi4 (1926); Post-Impressionism, Royal
the Societe des Aquafortistes, a collective Academy, London, exhibition catalogue (1979)
undertaking to promote etching as an art form
independent of its reproductive function, May, Ernest (1 845-1925) A successful busi-
which was sponsored by baudelaire, legros nessman who features in degas' Portraits in the
and bracquemond. See also prints Bourse (1878-79; Musee d'Orsay). He was
A. Tabarant, Manet et ses oeuvres (1947); H.C. interested in the arts and had a large collection
and C.A. White, Canvases and Careers; Institu- that was originally comprised of old masters
tional Changes in the French Painting World and i8th-c. French paintings. In the late 1870s,
(1967) however, under the influence of Jean-Baptiste
faure and caillebotte, he started collecting
Mauclair, Camille (1 872-1945) Born Camille Impressionist paintings, in addition to building
Faust, he was a novelist, poet and dramatist up an important group of early corots. He was
associated with the Symbolist movement and a committee member of the Amis du Louvre
for many years art critic of that movement's and on his death left all his paintings to the
magazine, the Mercure de France. In addition to museum.
monographs on Rodin, monet and puvis de 'Necrologie: Ernest May', in Bulletin de I'art
chavannes, he published in 1903 a book ancien et moderne (Jan. 1926); 'Donation May au
devoted to the Impressionists which, despite its Musee du Louvre', L' Amour de I'art (March
many imperfections, contributed much to the 1926)
appreciation of the movement, especially in
England and the usa. (The English translation Medan In 1878, as a result of his growing
of 1903 by P.G. Konody preceded the French prosperity, zola bought ugly house at
a rather
version, L'Impressionnisme, son histoire, son Medan, on the Seine north-west of Paris, which
esthetique, ses maitres, Paris, 1904.) Also in 1903 he began to use as a country retreat. It was close
he published a novel, La Ville lumiere, which to the railway, which cut across part of the
presents a thinly disguised portrait of degas as
the artist Hubert Feuillery. An ardent defender
of Impressionism, he was, however, contemp-
tuous of pissarro (he was a fervid anti-Semite)
and condescending towards cezanne.
T.R. Bowie, The Painter in French Fiction 4* *#*
(1950); J. Seznec, Literature and the Visual Arts in
Nineteenth-Century France (1963)
137
Mellon, Paul
13
Millet, Jean-Frai^ois
Millet's Angelus, painted between 1858 and 1859, reflects the painter's peasant roots and his
memories of rural life in Normandy.
B. Farwell, Manet and the Nude, A Study in nower (now lost) at the Salon, and this was
Iconography in the Second Empire (198 1); K. praised by Theophile gautier and bought by
Adler, Manet (1986) Alexandre Ledru-Rollin, the Minister of the
Interior. In 1849, when a cholera epidemic
Millet, Jean-Francois (1814-75) The son of a broke out in Paris, Millet moved to barbizon
small peasant farmer of Greville in Normandy, on the advice of the engraver Charles-Emile
Millet showed a precocious interest in drawing, Jacque (1813-94) and took a house near that of
and arrived in Paris in 1 83 8 to become a pupil of Theodore rousseau. Devoted to this area as a
Paul Delaroche. He had to fight against great subject for his work, he was one of those who
odds, living for long a life of extreme penury. most clearly helped to create the Barbizon
He exhibited at the salon for the first time in School. His paintings on rural themes attracted
1840, and married two years later. At this time, growing acclaim and between 1858 and 1859 he
the main influences on him were Poussin and painted the famous Angelus (Musee d'Orsay),
Eustache Le Sueur, and the type of work he which 40 years later was to be sold for the
produced consisted predominantly of mytho- sensational price of 553,000 francs.
which he was
logical subjects or portraiture, at Although he was officially distrusted because
especially adept (Portrait of a Naval Officer, of his real or imaginary Socialist leanings, his
1845; Musee des Beaux-Arts, Rouen). own attitude towards his chosen theme of
His memories of rural life, and his intermit- peasant life was curiously ambivalent. Being of
tent contacts with Normandy, however, peasant stock, he tended to look upon farm-
impelled him to that concern with peasant life workers as narrow-minded and oblivious of
that was to be characteristic of the rest of his beauty, and did not accept the notion that
artistic career. In 1848 he exhibited The Win- 'honest toil' was the secret of happiness. In fact,
139
Mirbeau, Octave
doors, and he had only a limited awareness of stood for perhaps with greater clarity than
tonal values, but his draughtsmanship had a anyone else. The eldest son of a Parisian
monumentality that appealed to artists such as shopkeeper, who moved to Le Havre when he
seurat and van gogh, who was also enthralled was five, he went to Paris at the age of 19 to
by his subject-matter, with its social impli- study at the academie Suisse, where he met
cations. Millet's career was greatly helped by pissarro. After a period of military service in
DURAND-RUEL. See also PASTELS, POLITICS, Algeria, he returned to Le Havre and com-
REALISM menced painting landscapes, coming into fruit-
E. Moreau-Nelaton, Millet raconte par lui- ful and encouraging contact with boudin and
meme, 3 vols. (1921); R.L. Herbert, 'Millet jongkind. In 1863 he returned to Paris to study
revisited', Burlington Magazine (July and Sept. at the atelier of Charles gleyre, where he met
1962); Clark (1973a) bazille, renoir and sisley. With these artists he
went to paint in the forest of Fontainebleau,
Mirbeau, Octave (1848-1917) A novelist where they evolved many of the ideas that were
from Calvados who lived and worked in Paris, to be fundamental to Impressionism.
Mirbeau was also an art critic. He became an Monet had some success at the salon, and,
impassioned defender of Impressionism, and with a mistress, Camille Doncieux, and an
was especially linked with monet, renoir and illegitimate child to support, the notion of
pissarro, though he did not approve of the achieving success through official channels to
latter's excursion into seurat's style. In 1889 he alleviate his penury was to be a complicating
wrote the introduction to Monet's first retros- factor in his creative evolution until the 1880s,
pective at the gallery of Georges petit, and also when he started to win acceptance for those
to the exhibitions later organized by durand- works that really represented his creative inten-
ruel of works by the same painter on the tion. At one point, in 1868, he tried to commit
themes of London and Venice. In L''Art des suicide, but his confidence was restored by help
deux-mondes, a magazine financed by Durand- from Bazille. When war broke out in 1870 he
Ruel, he also wrote the first important assess- went to London, where he came into contact
ment of Pissarro's paintings. He was especially with durand-ruel, who started to exhibit his
perceptive about the work of Renoir, to which works. It was here that he made his first contact
he devoted an important study, published in with the works of Turner, the full impact of
191 3. His collected art criticism was published which was to be felt in the 1 890s; by then he was
posthumously in 1921 as Des Artistes. experimenting more freely with the expression
Although he did not write much about of light, which had already begun to be his main
degas, he clearly used him as the model for the concern (Impression; Sunrise, 1872; Musee Mar-
character Lirat in a novel, Le Calvaire, published mottan, Paris).
in 1886, which depicts the artist as an embit- Back in France, he went to live at argen-
tered, satirical misanthrope, dominated by a teuil, where he painted regattas, life on the
140
Monet, Claude
Monet painting waterlilies in his garden at Giverny, [920: the supreme plein-air painter at the height of
his powers.
river, railways and bridges, and was fre- overpowering sense of visual vitality. He exhi-
quently joined by Renoir and manet, all of bited these at the 1877 impressionist exhibi-
them learning from each other and exploring tion, but it is curious that, though he was the
the recently discovered potential of plein-air supreme exponent of the artistic ideals of the
painting (Renoir, Monet Working in his Garden movement, his relations with the group as a
at Argenteuil, 1873; The Wadsworth Athen- whole were irregular, and tinged, on his part,
aeum, Hartford, Conn.). Although throughout with a certain diffidence. He did not participate
his career he was to visit many places, including in the exhibitions of 1880, 1881 or 1886 and,
Holland, Norway and italy, and although he though he was on the closest possible terms of
was to devote a good deal of time and attention intimacy with Renoir and, intermittently, with
to seeking suitable painting sites - in his house at Pissarro, many of his main contacts were with
giverny there is still a large collection of artists such as sargent and carolus-duran,
guidebooks - his main output was concerned with whom he came into contact through
with those places in the Seine valley north of Georges petit's Expositions Internationales.
Paris where he spent most of his life. In 1878 he moved to vetheuil, and two years
His landscapes seldom have a prime focus, later a one-man exhibition of his works orga-
and sometimes he edits what he sees - leaving nized by charpentier was a failure. In the mean
out, for instance, in some of his pictures of time he had been painting a series of seascapes
Argenteuil, the factory chimneys which were, around the Channel coast; these expressed a side
in fact, so essential a part of the landscape. In of his creative character that revelled in the
1876 he painted the three views of the Gare violent and, drawing its inspiration largely
Saint-Lazare that encapsulate his achievement from delacroix, verged on the confines of
in the depiction of translucency, and in the Expressionism (Rough Sea, Etretat, 1883; Musee
animation of brushwork and colour to create an des Beaux-Arts, Lyons). A great change took
141
Montmartre
receiving some 20,000 francs from the dealer, beyond the of the canvas. Japanese
limits
and following year 35,000 francs; this was
in the influence is also apparent in his concern with the
in addition to those paintings he sold on his complex relationship between space and sur-
own. Partly as a result of this upturn in his face. The main preoccupation of his whole
fortunes, he moved in 1883 to giverny, where career had been to give visual permanence to
he was to live for the rest of his life, and which the evanescent, to halt time not that involved
was to be the centre and inspiration of his work in human action, but in those fluctuations of
for some 40 years. Meanwhile, he had met the light and movement which make nature a
hoschede family, first as patrons, then as living thing. No other painter has been so
friends - and in the case of Mme
Hoschede, consistently effective in doing so. See also
who came to live at Giverny with her children, ANTECEDENTS, ASTRUC, BOUGIVAL, BRASSERIE DES
something more - a relationship that was MARTYRS, BRUYAS, CAFE GUERBOIS, COLOUR,
legalized on the death of their respective DRAWING, ENGLAND, ETRETAT, GAUDIBERT, GEF-
spouses, when they married. FROY, LA GRENOUILLERE, LOUVECIENNES, LUXEM-
Giverny Monet found the kind of focus of
In BOURG, MANTZ, MUSIC, PASTELS, PHOTOGRAPHY,
familiarity that had always been one of his PORTRAITURE, PRICES, PRINTS, SAINTE-ADRESSE,
preoccupations, though he was to continue SOCIAL BACKGROUND, TECHNIQUE, VILLE D'AV-
painting subjects from other places (e.g. Twi- ray [19, 28, 34, 50-1, 52, 54, 56, 81, 85, 86, gg,
light, S. Giorgio Maggiore, Venice, 1908; Natio- 108, 114, 168, lgi, ig5, 227}
nal Museum of Wales, Cardiff). In the 1880s he Hoschede, Monet; ce mal-connu, 2 vols.
J. P.
had for while tried figure painting, under the
a (i960); D. Wildenstein, Monet, biographie et
influence of Sargent, and still-life painting, but catalogue raisonne, 4 vols. (1974-85); J. House,
as his financial position improved, he was able Monet: Nature into Art (1986)
to dedicate all his creative activities to those
explorations of light, atmosphere and time he Montmartre Deriving its name from three
often indicated on the back of his canvases the Christians who were
martyred there in the 3rd
hour of the day at which they were painted - c. ad, Montmartre is one of the hills surround-
that culminated in the great series of Nympheas, ing paris. A major point of military defence, it
or 'Waterlilies' (Musee d'Orsay; Musee Mar- played such a role in the early 19th c, when the
mottan; Orangerie; Tate Gallery, London; gypsum whose miles of underground
quarries,
Museum of Modern Art, New York). The galleries threatened to undermine the hill, were
preoccupation with single subjects surveyed abandoned, as were the 30 mills driven by wind
under differing temporal and atmospheric con- power which gave the place its distinctive
ditions was also exemplified in the series of appearance. At this time Montmartre was very
Haystacks (1890-91), Poplars (1891-92) and much as zola described it in L'Assommoir -
Rouen Cathedral (189293). 'looking as though it were part of the country-
142
Montmartre
The junction of the rues des Abbesses and Lepic, Montmartre, c.1890. The quarter attracted many of the
Impressionists, and Renoir lived there in 1875.
side, with green trees shading the cheap family of petty craftsmen his father was a
taverns'. It was the writers who first started tailor - he found the social milieu especially
living there, including Nerval, Murger and attractive and in 1875 he rented for 100 francs a
Heine, but artists were already making their month a small house in the rue Cortot, near the
appearance by the time of the Commune, when Place du Tertre. It had a charming, luxuriantly
the people of Montmartre, refusing to sur- overgrown garden, which appears in The
render to the government the 171 canons that Swing (1876; Musee d'Orsay), and in Garden of
had been used against the Prussians, precipitated the rue Cortot (1876; Carnegie Institute, Pitts-
the bloody uprising that has become part of the burgh). The house was close to the Moulin de la
legendary history of the Left. Galette, one of the three surviving mills on the
Access to the quarter had been made easier by hill. Originally used for grinding iris roots for
the replanning of the city under Baron Hauss- perfume, it had been converted by the Debray
mann, and its role as a place of entertainment family into a cafe-restaurant at which balls if
was stimulated by its population, which con- the word is not too pretentious were held on
sisted basically of shop assistants, workers in the Sundays from three in the afternoon until
minor trades and theatrical underlings. It was an midnight, with an entrance fee of 30 centimes.
ideal milieu for the Impressionists, with their It was one of these Sunday dances that Renoir
passion for recording contemporary life, pis- depicted with such loving attention in his Dance
sarro had been sketching there as early as i860, at the Moulin de la Galette (1876; Musee
and in 1869 sisley painted a memorable view of d'Orsay). It was obvious why, when he was in
Montmartre (Musee de Grenoble). But of all Naples in 1881, Renoir could write to his
the Impressionists it was renoir who was really friend, the collector Charles deudon, 'I feel
devoted to the place. Coming as he did from a quite lost when I am away from Montmartre.
143
1
Moore, George
144
Morisot, Berthe
allthe footstool?'; and he dismissed monet by more. You upset and discourage me.' Unlike
saying that 'he sees clearly, and he sees truly, but that of the Impressionists, Moreau's sensuality
does he see beautifully? Is his an enchanted was of the mind rather than of the eye. See also
vision?' After becoming involved for some FANTIN-LATOUR
time in the Irish literary renaissance centred Gustave Moreau, Louvre, Paris, exhibition
around the Abbey Theatre, he settled down to catalogue (1961); J. Pierre, Gustave Moreau
become the 'Sage of Ebury Street', duplicating (1972); Catalogue, Musee Gustave Moreau,
in London the role that mallarme had played in Paris (1974)
Paris. See also cafes, literature
n W. Rothenstein, Men and Memories, 2 vols. Morisot, Berthe (1841-95) Morisot's interest
(1932); D. Cooper, 'George Moore and in art was initiated by her father, a top-ranking
Modern Painting', in Horizon (Feb. 1945); civil servant at the Cour des Comptes, who
Cooper (1954); J. -P. Collet, George Moore et la taught her to draw. She was then given painting
France (1957) lessons, together with her sister Edma, by
Joseph Guichard, a friend of corot, in whose
Moreau, Gustave (182698) The son of an studio she herself worked for some time. She
architect, an admirer and pupil of Chasseriau, was also in contact with fantin-latour, whom
whose influence he never escaped, he spent she met in 1859.
three years in where he was greatly
Italy, All who came into touch with her at this time
attracted by the works of Benozzo Gozzoli and were impressed not only by her skill and
Vittore Carpaccio. By the time he returned to facility, but by her sensitivity to changes that
Paris, he had evolved his own very personal were taking place in the world of art. On the
style, exotic, allusive and bearing many charac- advice of Corot, she and Edma went to work at
teristics of what was later to be known as the auvers and Fontainebleau, where she met
'fin-de-siecle' style, as exemplified, for instance, daubigny, Antoine guillemet and Daumier. In
in the works of Aubrey Beardsley. 1864 she made her first submissions to the
Sphinx (Metropo-
In 1864 his Oedipus and the salon; two of her works were hung and
litan Museum, New York) had an enormous admired by the critics. She exhibited regularly
success at the salon, and he became a popular there until 1873, and her remarkable Paris Seen
figure in literary and artistic circles. Two years from the Trocadero (1872; Kirkland Collection,
later The Apparition had an even greater success. Palm Beach, Fla.) attracted a great deal of praise
An emotive painting in watercolour, it and attention as a technical tour deforce.
depicted the story of Herod and Salome, which In 1868 she met manet through Fantin-
was to grip so powerfully the imagination of Latour, and he immediately became a warm
the latter half of the century, and to find admirer, getting her to pose for some memor-
expression in the writings of Oscar Wilde and able paintings, notably The Balcony (1869;
others. Moreau's works indeed had a great Musee d'Orsay) and Repose (1870; Rhode
appeal to writers, including especially huys- Island School of Design). She greatly encour-
mans, who featured descriptions of them in his aged Manet's move towards plein-air painting,
influential novel A Rebours. He commenced while his influence on her
apparent in such
is
various large canvases, few of which were paintings as The Artist's SisterEdma and Their
completed. In 1892 he became a professor at the Mother (1870; National Gallery of Art, Wash-
ecole des beaux-arts, and numbered amongst ington). In 1874 Berthe married Eugene,
his students Matisse, Rouault, Pierre-Albert Manet's brother, and they had a daughter Julie,
Marquet and Manguin, all of whom owed who later kept a fascinating diary, published in
much to his enlightened teaching. an English translation as Growing Up with the
Although the Impressionists tended to Impressionists (1987).
despise his works, this reactionwas not univer- This was the year of the first impressionist
sal, manet was a friend and admirer, and was exhibition, at which Morisot exhibited several
largely responsible, through his friend Antonin works, including the now famous The Cradle
proust, for ensuring that Moreau received the (1873; Musee d'Orsay). She was to participate
Legion of Honour. To another friend, degas, in all the exhibitions during her lifetime, and
Moreau once confessed 'After all, I may be was one of the mainstays of the group. Prefer-
wrong, but I see things a certain way and must ring on the whole interior and domestic
work that way, and I simply cannot see you any subjects, she developed an execution free from
145
Morisot, Berthe
Berthe Morisot at work in her studio. In 1877 Paul Mantz wrote: 'There is only one impressionist in the
whole revolutionary group and that is Mile Morisot.'
work began to show the strong influence of Morisot's The Artist's Sister Edma and Their
renoir, who had become an intimate friend of Mother, 1870, was retouched by Manet.
146
Music
her family (In the Dining- Room, 1884; National boulevard Voltaire. There he held dinners for
Gallery of Art, Washington). During the his painter friends every Wednesday night,
remaining three years of her life she travelled a assisted by his sister Marie. Loyal and suppor-
great deal, and held a very successful exhibition tive, he amassed a large collection of Impressio-
at boussod and valadon. Her daughter Julie nist paintings bought, so his detractors said, at
married Ernest Rouart, the grandson of Degas' very low prices. They included 15 renoirs, 8
friend, and her niece Nini Gobillard became CEZANNES, 25 PISSARROS, 10 MONETS, 28 SISLEYS,
Mallarme's wife. See also bougival, England, 22 Guillaumins, 2 gachets, as well as works by
GOBILLARD, GONZALES, GUICHARD, JOYANT, Delacroix and Constantin guys - an allocation
LEROLLE, PASTELS, PORTRAITURE, SOCIAL BACK- that seems to suggest that, in part at least, he was
GROUND [ 103, 156] influenced by the poverty or pertinacity of the
A. Fourreau, Berthe Morisot (1925); H. relevant artist - Sisley and Pissarro being
Perruchot, La Vie de Manet (1959); Correspon- respectively representative of these qualities.
dance de Berthe Morisot, ed. D. Rouart (1950; His portrait was painted by Renoir (1877;
English trans. 1986); K. Adler and T. Garb, Collection of Mrs Enid A. Haupt, New York)
Berthe Morisot (1987); Berthe Morisot: Impres- and Pissarro (1878; Museum of Fine Arts,
sionist, National Gallery of Art, Washington, Springfield, Mass.).
exhibition catalogue (1987) Later, he bought Rouen, where
a hotel at
Pissarro stayed for a lengthy period and where
Morozov, Mikhail (1870 1903) and Ivan Murer frequently entertained Monet, who was
(1871 1921) Members of a family of successful living nearby at giverny. Murer was also a
Russian textile manufacturers in Tver, they novelist of some originality, if not significance,
were both passionate collectors of French and when he retired to auvers-sur-oise he took
painting. From 1890 onwards Mikhail devel- up painting seriously, holding exhibitions at the
oped an interest in the Impressionists and Theatre de la Bodiniere in 1895 and at vol-
bought important works by manet, renoir, lard's gallery in 1898. He was very intimate
monet, and Toulouse-Lautrec. These were with the playwright and critic Paul alexis, who
hung in his house in Glazovsky Lane, Moscow, helped his career as a painter. On his tombstone
which became a meeting-place for those with at Auvers are inscribed the words: 'Ouvrier -
advanced literary and artistic interests. He Litterateur-Peintre'. See also cabaner, cafes
inspired his younger brother Ivan with the same P. Gachet, Deux amis des Impressionnistes; Le
passion which, in the latter's case, was all the Docteur Gachet et (1956); M. Reilly Burt,
Murer
more enthusiastic for his having been a student 'Le patissier Murer', in L'Oeil (Dec. 1975)
at the Ecole Polytechnique Superieure in Paris.
They became dedicated customers of durand- Music The relationship between Impression-
ruel and employed an agent in Paris to buy ism and music can be considered on two levels;
from other sources. As they were advised by a the simpler is the personal one, of the interest
number of critics, their purchases were always which the Impressionists as individuals took in
judicious, and included works by sisley (Ivan's music and musicians; the second, more com-
favouriteartist), Renoir, Monet, pissarro and plex, is that concerning the existence of
cezanne. They also went on to collect works Impressionism in music.
by van gogh, signac, Bonnard, Denis, Matisse Most of the Impressionists had an interest in
and Picasso. Their collection, like that of music, which was common amongst artists of
shchukin, was later distributed between the their time, manet's wife Suzanne (see leenhoff)
Pushkin and Hermitage Museums. was the daughter of a well-known organist and
M. Ginsburg, 'Art Collectors of Old Russia', herself a gifted pianist. One of her closest
Apollo (Dec. 1973); Impressionist and Post- musical friends was Emmanuel Chabrier
Impressionist Paintings in Soviet Museums, ed. M. (1841-94), who, though mainly known as the
Bessonova (1985) composer of comic operas such as Le Roi malgre,
was also a distinguished conductor and is
Murer, Eugene (1 845-1906) A schoolfriend of regarded by some, in his piano music, as a
guillaumin, through whom he got to know predecessor of Debussy and Ravel. He was a
the rest of the Impressionists, he was a patissier regular attender at the musical evenings that the
by trade and was so successful that he opened a Manets used to hold at their home, which was
small but very successful restaurant at 95 near his own, and he dedicated his Impromptu in
147
Music
paintings; the sale of his collection in 1896 interesting to note that as late as 1880, when he
included seven works by Manet, including the wrote to Albert hecht asking him for a ticket
Bar at the Folies-Bergere (1882; Courtauld Insti- admitting him to the examination of prospec-
tute, London). tive ballet-dancers at the Opera, he confessed
148
Music
149
1,
Muybridge, Eadweard
Lockspeiser.
go
*fcg
Music and Painting (1973); New Grove Diction-
ary of Music and Musicians, 20 vols., entry on
'Impressionism' (1980)
150
Napoleon III
The Empress Eugenie, consort of Napoleon III, and her ladies, painted by the successful
society portraitist F.X. Winterhalter c. 1853.
dealers didn't want us, yet we had to exhibit. assumed personal control of the government,
But where? Nadar, the great Nadar, who is as and in the following year was proclaimed
good as fresh bread, lent us his place.' It is, of Emperor.
course, possible that Nadar persuaded his tenant The early years of his reign were marked by
to be accommodating, but he was not person- considerable political repression and censor-
ally responsible for the exhibition. ship; in 1 869 manet's lithograph of the shooting
There can be little doubt that Nadar's of the Emperor Maximilian in Mexico - the
remarkable photographs of contemporary life, result of one of Napoleon's ill-fated schemes -
including his aerial views of Paris, had an was censored; opponents of the regime, such as
influence on the Impressionists' visual imagina- Victor Hugo, went into exile, and there was a
tion. (The whole question is carefully and general air of repression. On the other hand, the
accurately discussed in A. Scharf, Art and price of bread was regulated; immense public
Photography (1975); see also photography.) It is works, including the rebuilding of large areas of
an interesting coincidence that the year of the Paris, were undertaken; agriculture was subsi-
first Impressionist exhibition also saw the first dized; and the wars against Russia, Austria and
industrialization of bromide plates for cameras, China stimulated national self-confidence.
thus bringing photography within the range of France was also reassured by the spectacularly
a wider group of practitioners. [133, 163] successful Exposition Universelle of 1862,
Nadar, Quand j'etais photographe, preface by which underlined the extent to which the
L. Daudet (1900, repr. 1976); Nadar, Biblio- nation was, somewhat tardily, benefiting from
theque Nationale, Paris, exhibition catalogue the Industrial Revolution, and which empha-
(1965); J. Prinet and A. Dilasser, Nadar (1966) sized the new position of paris as one of the
most spectacular of European capitals.
Napoleon III (1808-73) Charles Louis Napo- Napoleon and his Empress Eugenie formed
leon Bonaparte was the third son of Louis the centre of a court life as brilliant in appear-
Bonaparte, King of Holland and brother of ance, if not in fact, as that which had flourished
Napoleon I. In 1832 he became head of the under the ancien regime, and he presided over a
Napoleonic family and in 1848, after an earlier comparatively enlightened and certainly gener-
attempt to seize power, became President of ous system of art patronage, which he saw as
France. In 185 1, as the result of a coup d'etat, he one of the props of his power. Inevitably, the art
151
Nieuwerkerke, Emilien, Comte de
forms he most favoured were of the academic those of the Princess, were lovingly recorded by
variety, and one of the results of the patronage the GONCOURTS.
that he dispersed was to widen still further the He had great influence on such things as the
already apparent gulf between official and choice of pictures at the salon: in 1868, for
avant-garde art, and to link each with an instance, after one of daubigny's pictures had
attitude of political conformity or political been accepted and another was presented,
dissent which, inevitably, neither possessed. His Nieuwerkerke remarked 'Oh no, we've had
strong and forcibly expressed dislike of the enough of that kind of painting.' His views
works of courbet - shared incidentally by were, indeed, usually reactionary, and he
nadar, who drew some savage caricatures of tended to identify artistic with political radical-
the painter - almost certainly had political as ism, commenting on courbet and the barbi-
well as aesthetic foundations - Courbet was a zon School, 'This is the painting of democrats,
notorious opponent of his rule. On the other of people who don't change their linen, who
hand itwas Napoleon III who was responsible want to deceive men of the world. It is an art
for creating the salon des refuses of 1863, seen which displeases and disgusts me.' Although he
as an official snub to the hide-bound members was reluctantly involved in the salon des
of the salon jury and a gesture towards artistic refuses, he rejected two letters from cezanne
freedom. An Ministry of Fine Arts,
efficient in the spring of 1866 suggesting a repeat of the
under the Comte de nieuwerkerke, not only experiment. It is worth noting, however, that
dispensed patronage, supervised art education, Paul alexis, in an article that appeared in 1873,
created a nationwide system of museums and commented, 'Many artists are now beginning
art galleries and promoted industrial art in all its to regret the passing of the Empire, and of M.
forms, but undertook the preservation or Nieuwerkerke.' See also politics
restoration of France's heritage of national F. Henriet, Le Comte de Paris (1893); S.C.
monuments. After all, Napoleon's was the last Burchill, Imperial Masquerade; The Paris of
political regime in France to give its name to a Sapoleon III (197 1); P. Mainardi, Art and
style of fashion and design. Politics of the Second Empire (1987)
Tempted foolishly into war with Prussia
when he was liberalizing his government, he Nittis, Guiseppe de (1846-84) Born at Bar-
was crushingly defeated, and died in exile in south of italy, he studied painting at
letta in the
London. See also franco-prussian war, la Naples and soon became involved in various
grenouillere, politics [215] anti-academic art movements, such as the
P. La Gorce, Histoire du Second Empire (1899 Macchiaioli. In 1867 he visited Paris for the first
1905, repr. 1970); D. Pinkney, Napoleon III and time, and finally settled there in 1872. A friend
the Rebuilding of Paris (1958); A. Dansette, of manet and degas, he participated in the first
Xaissance de la France moderne, le Second Empire impressionist exhibition, though most of the
(1976) others had a very low opinion of his work; Paul
alexis described it as 'more like pastry than
Nieuwerkerke, Emilien, Comte de (181 1 painting'. Though he remained on friendly
92) Probably the most important, and certainly terms with most of the Impressionists, De Nittis
one of the most interesting, figures in the realized that his own gifts lay elsewhere, and
cultural life of the Second Empire. Born of an started to produce those paintings, predomi-
aristocratic Dutch family, he started his career nantly of high society, that were to make him
as a sculptor, but with the advent to power of famous and successful (On the Banks of the Seine,
napoleon in, his charms and abilities - no less 1874; Galleria d'Arte Moderna, Milan). In 1878
than the fact that he was the lover of Princesse he was awarded the Legion of Honour, much to
Mathilde Bonaparte, daughter of the great Degas' disgust, and possibly envy.
Napoleon's brother Jerome - led him to a De Nittis continued in his prosperity to
position of considerable power in the world of support the Impressionists by buying their
art. In 1849 he was appointed Director-General works extensively, and was especially appreci-
of National Museums, and in 1869 the Emperor ative of the paintings of monet. In 1879 he held
created for him the post of Superintendent of an exhibition of his own works at the offices of
Fine Art. His apartments in the Louvre were the la vie moderne, which was run by the
location of a salon frequented by everybody charpentier family and had become one of the
who was anybody, and his activities, as well as main outlets for the Impressionists. It was the
152
Paris
O u vu**Ji<*-, " -~
Oiler y Cestero, Francisco (1 833-1917) Born Baron Haussmann armed with the pick and trowel
in Puerto Rico, he went to Paris and became a with which he was rebuilding Paris.
153
Paris
killed 20,000 of Paris' 861,400. Yet the Paris of the splendour of its public buildings. Appro-
their maturity was one of the wonders of the priately enough, railway stations were built like
modern world, with great boulevards, bright cathedrals, and the type of interaction they
street lighting, and immense vitality. Despite provoked is exemplified in the Gare Saint-
the siege of 1870 and the subsequent ravages of Lazare, the subject of paintings by monet and
the Commune, Paris had become the cultural CAILLEBOTTE, which stimulated the growth of
capital of Europe, providing the subject-matter the batignolles area in which it was situated.
of many of their paintings and, by the unique This became an area greatly favoured by the
qualities it had acquired, giving Impressionism Impressionists in the early stages of their
characteristics it would not have possessed had development, and the station, by offering easy
it evolved elsewhere. egress to the surrounding countryside, pro-
Very largely this was due to Baron Hauss- moted the growth of weekend pleasure places
mann (180991) who, as Prefect of the Depart- and country retreats such as argenteuil, pon-
ment of the Seine, ruthlessly, efficiently and toise and bougival, as well as giving easy access
magnificently rebuilt whole sections of the city, to the Channel ports and seaside resorts. Gar-
mainly but not exclusively in the western area nier's grandiose Opera gave architectural
of the Right Bank. He created a network of 50 expression to the importance which that insti-
kms (31 miles) of boulevards, which may have tution always possessed, and the growth of
had some strategic purpose, in making the large department stores such as the Bon Marche
building of barricades more difficult and facili- (1872) not only enhanced the urban landscape,
154
Paris
The Eiffel Tower on its way to dominating the Paris skyline in 1888. The pavilions for the centenary
Exposition Universelle can be seen in the background.
but gave Parisians the opportunity of acquiring scholar, founded the museum that bears his
smart but cheap clothes of a kind that make, for name, and in 1891 Henri Cernuschi, a friend of
instance, the shopgirls of degas or the dancing Gambetta, bequeathed his fabulous collection
midinettes of RENOIR so engagingly attractive (a of Chinese art to the nation; the creation of a
phenomenon somewhat dramatically described Museum of Decorative Arts, based on the
by Zola in Au Bonheur des dames, 1882). collections of the Duchesse de Galliera, opened
Paris had always been famous for its cultural up a new dimension of artistic experience.
amenities, especially as far as the fine arts were Less permanent exhibitions were a constant
concerned. The Louvre had been a great gallery Every year the
feature of the Parisian calendar.
since the time of the first Napoleon, and its Salon showed some 5000 paintings by close on
treasures had been significantly enhanced 2000 painters, attracting in 1884, for example,
with special relevance for the Impressionists 238,000 visitors. By 1861 there were 104
by the addition of Louis-Philippe's Spanish commercial art galleries in the capital mount-
Gallery. The du Luxembourg, originally
Palais ing, on average, 8 exhibitions a year. But more
the residence of Marie de'Medici, had become specific to Paris was the of international
series
since 18 18 a gallery of 'living French art', exhibitions, more frequent and more popular
drawing its new acquisitions mainly from the than similar events in London, Berlin or
salons by a system that was constantly varying. Vienna, which not only attracted large
Other public galleries and museums opened numbers of foreign tourists, but enhanced the
during the latter half of the century. In 1879 the reputation of French art and stimulated collec-
Musee des Monuments Francais offered to tors from other countries to buy French paint-
artists, especially sculptors, a repertoire of ings. Exhibitions of this kind were put on in
works of art, mainly medieval, that was to exert 1855, 1867, 1878, 1889 and 1900. Each of them
an important influence on people such as had a section devoted to art - that in the 1855
Rodin. In 1889 Emile Guimet, a collector and exhibition was visited by 982,000 people
155
Pastels
130, 143, 144, 160, 166, 202] Some indication of this revival is provided by
M. Girouard, Cities and People (1985); J. the fact that in 1870 the Societe des Pastellistes
Seigel, Bohemian Paris; Culture, Politicsand the was founded in Paris, and ten years later the first
Boundaries of Bourgeois Life, 1830^30 (1986); exhibition of the Pastel Society, at which
Zeldin (1988) whistler exhibited, was held in London.
millet had been one of the first of his
Pastels The sketch-like quality that was of the generation to use pastel, manet experimented
essence of Impressionism, and the movement's with it a great deal, though somewhat exceptio-
accentuation of the process of creation rather nally, of the 89 of his works in this medium that
than of the completion and finishing of a work have survived, more than 70 are portraits of
of art, naturally attractedmany of its practi- women, such as, for instance, La Viennoise, a
tioners to the medium of pastel. It provided a portrait of Irma Brunner (c. 1880; Cabinet des
simple way of enclosing, within an outline, flat Dessins, Musee du Louvre). Although he occa-
areas of colour created by rapid, spontaneous sionally used paper as a ground, most of the
strokes, of emphasizing highlights, producing pastels are on canvas or board. In all cases they
half-tones by 'scuffing' to reveal the ground, have a dazzling freshness, a sense of spontaneity,
and allowing the artist to keep an immediate and a freedom from pretentious analysis that is
check on colour effects. Its impermanent entirely delightful. These qualities are also
nature, and its capacity of being manipulated by apparent in the pastels of morisot, who used
the fingers and altered quickly, gave it a quality very much the same technical devices but
that even watercolour did not possess. introduced a more perceptible element of
There had been a growing interest in pastel, analysis into her portraits.
due in part at least to the rehabilitation of artists renoir tended to use chalk in his explorative
of the 1 8th c, especially great pastellists such as work, but pastel played an important role too,
156
Patrons and collectors
especially in the 1880s, when he produced such also as sellable works of art for those who could
works as the Young Woman with a Muff not afford his oil paintings. But it was degas
(Metropolitan Museum, New York), and who not only used pastel extensively but, from
explored the elements of his great Baigneuses of the 1880s onwards, raised it to the level of a
1884-87 in a huge pastel and wash sketch (The major art form, using it to depict volume and to
Art Institute of Chicago). This largeness of create pictorial freedom of the most innovative
concept is very much an innovation of the kind, in a manner that makes his works in this
Impressionists and is to be found again in medium asimportant as the paintings of
Renoir's Two Young Women (1895; Private Cezanne in opening up to art the way to the
collection, Switzerland), which measures future. His technical experiments were endless.
79 x 65 cms (3 1 x 25^ ins.) and in which he uses He rejected the smooth, unbroken application
complex criss-crossing lines to create a pattern of colour in favour of animated, broken up,
of highlights, catching an extraordinary feeling tessera-like strokes, with the pastel applied
of instantaneous observation. unevenly to allow underlying colour or the
monet inherited an interest in pastel from his ground to show through. As in all his works,
preceptor boudin, who used it extensively to form remained predominant, reinforced rather
produce remarkable studies of vast expanses of than dissolved by colour. Massive in size (the
cloud and sea; these sketches aroused the memorable After the Bath of 189598 in the
admiration of baudelaire, who commented on Kunstmuseum Solothurn measures 94.5 x 80.5
the fact that each recorded the date and time of cms; 37x32 ins.) and heroic in composition,
execution. Monet's own pastels partook of the not all of them are 'sketches', either in appear-
same explorative nature as Boudin's and were ance or intent. Works such as The Coiffure
clearly preliminary explorations for paintings. (1884-86; Metropolitan Museum, New York)
In the sketch for Waterloo Bridge in the or The Injured fockey (c.1897; Kunstmuseum,
Cabinet des Dessins in the Louvre, he seized on Basle) are of subjects that many other artists
various transitory combinations of colour and would have used for oil paintings.
form with a vigour of apprehension that brings CASSATT, who was so close to Degas, also
him close to an artist such as Munch. produced a great number of pastels, mostly of
pissarro began to use pastels in 1870, but saw intimate and domestic subjects, closer in feeling
them as independent works, rather than as to Manet's works in the medium, but showing
preparatory sketches for another medium, and strong Japanese influence. See also illustration
M.L. Bataille and G. Wildenstein, Catalogue
raisonne of the Oil Paintings, Pastels and Water-
colours of Berthe Morisot (1961); J. Leymarie,
Impressionistische Zeichnungen von Manet bis
Renoir (1969); A. Callen, Techniques of the
Impressionists (1982); Adriani (1985)
157
Peinture claire
having already got there, were progressing H.C. and C.A. White, Canvases and Careers
upwards in that social category. There were (1965); A. Boime, 'Entrepreneurial Patronage
very few collectors of the upper classes; the in Nineteenth-Century France', in Enterprise
Prince de wagram and the Bibescos were very and Entrepreneurs in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-
much the exception. A large number were Century France, ed. E.C. Carter (1976); Zeldin
professional people: doctors, such as gachet (1988)
and de bellio; teachers, such as the Abbe
gaugain; musicians, such as faure and Cha- Peinture claire A method of painting evolved
brier; lawyers, such as Emile Blemont; pub- and much used by manet, which creates a high-
lishers, such as charpentier; and civil servants, key colour configuration by first applying
such as chocquet. Then there were the loose-flowing and grasse, or fat, pigment onto
upwardly mobile nouveaux riches: the depart- the canvas and then, whilst the paint is still wet,
ment store magnate Ernest hoschede; the adding the half-tones and darker passages. This
successful patissier and restaurant-owner was the reverse of the accepted academic
Eugene murer; Francois depeaux, the success- process, which worked from the dark passages
ful Rouen merchant who left a large part of his towards the light. The resulting effect is one of
collection of Impressionists to his native city; sparkle and vitality, seen for instance in A Bar at
and the Swiss Oscar Schmitz (1861-193 1), who the Folies-Bergere (1882; Courtauld Institute,
built up a large and successful cotton industry in London), one of his last works, in which the
Le Havre and was of vital help to monet during technique is at its most highly developed. The
a difficult period. All these patrons and collec- technique was adopted by other Impressionists,
tors were very typical of the dominant social especially Manet's own personal followers,
class in late iorh-c. France, and almost any of morisot and gonzales. See also colour
them could have figured in the pages of zola's A. Callen, Techniques of the Impressionists
novels. (1982)
An important category of collector, how-
ever, and one that is often disregarded, is that of Pellerin, Auguste (1852-1929) A successful
artists, who often, as soon as they began to be margarine manufacturer who built up a signifi-
successful, bought paintings on quite a lavish cant collection of Impressionist paintings. It was
158
Perrot, Jules
Manet's sparkling portrayal of the Bar at the Folies-Bergere, 1882, shows extensive use of peinture claire, a
technique Manet himself evolved.
159
Perspective
The eye is drawn inwards through Caillebotte's dramatic use of perspective in Le Pont de V Europe of 1876.
In 1873he met degas, who made him the 1. A small drawing of an empty architectural
central The Dance Class (c. 1875;
figure in setting, made without a straight edge.
Musee d'Orsay, and c. 1876; Metropolitan 2. A careful perspectival drawing of the
Museum, New York). Degas also drew various above, made with a straight edge.
sketches of him in different media (Fitzwilliam 3. Drawings of figures and architectural
Museum, Cambridge, Art Institute of
in pencil; details.
Chicago, watercolour, ink and oil wash). [67] 4. Oil sketches for the component parts of the
n I. Guest, The Ballet of the Second Empire, 1858- picture which pay only cursory attention to the
70 (1974), Jules Perrot; Master of the Romantic perspective construction, intended to work out
Ballet (1984) the colour arrangements.
5. A modification, achieved in the finished
Perspective Although it would not be true to picture, of the figures and the perspectival
say that the Impressionists introduced a new construction, arrived at in such a way that an
type of perspective, their attitude towards its artificially achieved structure is presented as an
conventional forms was explorative and inno- objective depiction.
vative, cezanne was not the only one to notice There is evidence that the fidelity with which
that objects in close proximity to the eye do not Caillebotte depicted his sites may have owed a
follow the laws of classical perspective, a fact good photography, or the use of an
deal to
that has been exploited by many more recent optical drawing aid such as the camera lucida.
artists. The experiments in perspective carried The camera did indeed have a great influence on
out by caillebotte are the subject of detailed the perspective of the Impressionists as well as
analysis in K. Varnedoe's monograph of the on thatof their more traditional contemporar-
artist, in which it is pointed out that in works ies. Wide-angle lenses, with their potential for
such as Le Pont de l' Europe (1 876; Musee du Petit expanding space, were available from the 1860s
Palais, Geneva) the following stages were onwards, and the camera generally presented
involved: artists such as manet, who had already acquired
160
Petit, Georges
161
Phillips Collection
Renoir's Dejeuner des canotiers, pride of the Phillips Collection, was bought from the artist in 1 88 1, and
remained in Durand-Ruel's private collection until 1923, when his sons sold it to Duncan Phillips.
Art (1986); J. Rewald, Studies in Post- Homer, as well as works by Chardin, Ingres,
Impressionism (1986) Delacroix and courbet. Duncan, now actively
supported and encouraged by his artist wife
Phillips Collection The combination of a Marjorie, was however becoming increasingly
fortune made out of manufacturing window concerned with more recent art. This concern
glass and the influence of the writings of Walter was fostered by durand-ruel's sons, who in
Pater on a sensitive Yale undergraduate, who 1923 invited them both to lunch; facing them
had come to see art as 'an escape from the at the table was renoir's Le Dejeuner des canotiers
boundaries of the self, was responsible for the of 1 88 1, which they bought for the then
creation of an art collection housed in a fantastic sum of $125,000. It became the centre-
pleasant, but not remarkable, family mansion in piece of an impressive collection of Impressio-
Washington. Rich in many phases of art nist works, including Cezanne's Self-portrait of
history, it is especially so in its holdings of 1878, degas' Women Combing their Hair of
works by the Impressionists and their imme- number of post-impressio-
1875, an d a larger
diate successors. nist works, with a strong emphasis on van
Duncan Phillips and his brother Jim, who gogh and Bonnard. Duncan Phillips wrote a
died an unexpectedly early age, persuaded
at number of illuminating books about art and
their parents in 19 16 to devote the not inconsid- collecting, before his death in 1966.
erable sum of $10,000 a year to the purchase of D. Phillips, A Collection in the Making (1943),
works of art. By the time the collection was The Phillips Collection (1952)
opened to the public in 1 921, it contained some
250 pictures, many of them works by American Photography 'From today painting is dead':
painters such as Ryder, Eakins and Winslow although Paul Delaroche's comment on photo-
162
Photography
and the edges of his foliage started to show a Nadar's caricature (1855) emphasizes the claims of
fuzziness at precisely the time (c.1848) when the photography to be considered a form of fine art.
coated glass plates which began to supplant the
daguerrotype showed just that particular
characteristic. On his death more than 300 American daguerrotype. The execution of the
photographic plates, mostly of landscape sub- Emperor Maximilian unleashed a whole series
jects, were found in his studio. of photographs of the event - many of them
Most of the barbizon painters depended montages and in his painting of the scene
quite heavily on this new adjunct to their (Mannheim Museum) Manet relied on several
technique, and so it was inevitable that when of these, bazille used a combination of sketches
the Impressionists began, in their different and photographs for certain of his outdoor
ways, to adopt attitudes to natural reality, they groups, a fact which is very evident in the
should explore the potential of the camera. varying poses of Summer Scene, Bathers (1869;
There is more than an accidental significance in Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Mass.), and
the fact that their first exhibition should have monet's Women in the Garden (1867; Musee
been held in a building which had once been a d'Orsay), painted for Bazille, into whose
photographer's studio. Its landlord nadar, who collection it passed, was based on two photo-
had commenced his own career as an artist, was graphs taken at Bazille's home at Meric, near
not only one of the most innovative and Montpellier.
enterprising photographers of his time, but was It is known
that by the 1880s Monet
an active and loquacious member of the circle no fewer than four cameras, and he
possessed
which gathered at the cafe guerbois. One of was on very friendly terms with Theodore
manet's etched portraits of baudelaire was robinson, who had a clearly avowed policy of
made from a photograph taken by Nadar, and using the photographic image and who must
his portrait of Edgar Allen Poe, and another of almost certainly have had some influence on
that writer, intended for the French poet's him. But Monet belonged to a generation that
translation of Poe's stories, was based on an saw something slightly reprehensible in a
163
Photography
A photograph of Cezanne and the self-portrait he based on it in 1866. Unlike many artists of his day,
Cezanne felt no qualms about relying on photography.
painter's using a camera; he was especially 1880, and the Male Bather of 1885-90 (both
sensitive about the merits of plein-air painting, Museum of Modern Art, New York), were
a technique he did not invariably use, despite his based on photographic images.
protests to the contrary. He certainly possessed The influence of the camera went beyond its
photographs of Rouen cathedral, and more use on specific occasions, however. The quest
than probably used them when reworking for realism, which was one of the motivating
pictures from the series at giverny. In 1905 he drives of Impressionism, involved more than
wrote angrily to durand-ruel on the subject, subject-matter chosen from ordinary Hfe; it
which had apparently been brought up by called for a realism of gesture and action - as
William Rothenstein: i know a Mr. Harrison, opposed to the stylized syntax of movement
whom sargent asked to make me a little which the Academy had inherited from the
photograph of the Houses of Parliament, which Carracci and the Mannerists - and a recording
I have never used. But that is of no significance, of spontaneous rather than contrived move-
and whether my cathedrals, my Londons and ments. Until the 1840s artists intent on catching
other canvases are painted from nature or not is such moments in time had been dependent on a
nobody's business and is of no importance.' rapid sketching ability, which not all possessed.
cezanne, on the other hand had no qualms The camera provided an 'image of magical
about relying on the camera, and his friend and instantaneity', as degas described it. It was not
supporter Emile Bernard was astonished that merely that this image could on occasion be
he executed portraits from photographs, just as transferred to canvas or paper, but that the
he painted flower pictures from illustrations in visual paradigms created by the photographic
magazines. His self-portrait of 1866 (Private image, with its abrupt and often compositio-
collection) is painted from a photograph, and nally gauche bisections of vision and oddities of
c.i 868 Marion wrote to their mutual friend gesture, became an accepted part of the Impres-
Hcinrich Morstatt, 'Cezanne is planning a sionists' technique. Especially influential was
painting for which he will use some snaps .... I the 'snapshot' type of photograph available to
have your photograph and you will be in it.' the general public in the mid-i88os (the Kodak
His Melting Snow at Fontainebleau of about camera was first marketed in 1888). Additional
164
Pissarro, Camille
support was supplied from more historic though he continued to utilize the old glass
sources by the similar compositional brutalities plates with a tripod-based camera. In this field,
which occurred in the currently popular Japa- especially in his photographs of the halevy
nese prints. The extensive series of drawings family and of friends such as mallarme, he
which CAILLEBOTTE made for his exercise in the showed a real skill and creative brilliance, even
immediacy of observation, Peintres en batiment though over-enthusiastic experimentation
(1877; Private collection, Paris), show just how sometimes led to technical imperfections. See
far he was prepared to go in his quest for the also BAYARD, TECHNIQUE [24, 27, $2 1$0, ig8, ,
instantaneous eye, while his Rue de Paris; temps 221 , 222, 231]
de pluie (1877; Art Institute of Chicago) shows D. Halevy, Degas parle (i960); V.A. Coke,
a scene in which the perspective might have The Painter and the Photograph (1972); A.
been based on the wide-angle lens, which had Scharf, Art and Photography (1974)
been invented in the previous decade. The
camera had indeed made available to artists a Piette, Ludovic (1826-77) A landscape-
whole new range of visual experience which painter, who was of couture before
a pupil
hitherto had not been patient of analysis by the attending the academie Suisse, where he
unaided eye, including views from a consider- became friendly with pissarro and started to
able height or distance, such as those provided follow the tendencies of Impressionism. He
by the pictures Nadar took from his balloon, participated in the third and fourth impressio-
and detailed views of such normally inaccessible nist exhibitions during a period when his
subjects as the gargoyles of Notre-Dame. works were almost indistinguishable from
The locus classicus of the impact of the camera those of Pissarro, who often stayed with him in
on art in general, and on Impressionism in his house at Montfoucault in Brittany, and
particular, is the effect that the photographic where Pissarro painted a number of landscapes.
vision had on Degas. In 1878 the magazine La Around 1870 Piette painted a picture in
Nature published a series of illustrations docu- gouache of Pissarro at work, which later
menting the work which Eadweard Muy- belonged to Camille, the painter's son; now
bridge had been carrying out by photographic lost, it is known only through a photograph.
sequences of horses in motion, and this was L.R. Pissarro and L. Venturi, Camille Pissarro,
followed by an article about his discoveries in son art, son oeuvre, 2 vols. (1939)
L' Illustration. His work in this field had, to a
certain extent, been paralleled in France by that Pissarro, Camille (1830-1903) The most
of the French physiologist Etienne-Jules Marey, vocal, themost literate, the most active of all the
who had endeavoured to analyse the sound of Impressionists, Pissarro has an importance for
hoof beats. The whole subject fascinated both the movement that transcends his undeniable
artists and horsemen, and it seems probable that artistic achievements. He was at once an irritant
Degas attended the illustrated lecture given by and an inspiration to his fellows, constantly
Muybridge in the studio of the famous battle- pushing his own painting style in all possible
painter Ernest Meissonier, certain aspects of directions, in response to changes in the wind of
whose work he greatly admired, on 26 taste. At times almost unduly modest and
November 1881. But it was not until the unsure of himself, he was at others assertive and
publication of Muybridge's great work, Animal challenging in his attitudes. Given to analysing
Locomotion, in 1887 (of which he bought a and questioning his own creative processes, he
copy) that Degas began to apply these discover- was remarkably undogmatic in the plentiful
ies to his own work. He made at least two advice he gave to others. His own career
drawings of the Muybridge plate illustrating encapsulated all the different elements that gave
'Annie G. at the trot', and from that point Impressionism its individual qualities. A radical
onwards his depiction of horses in motion, in in politics, with a strong leaning towards those
both two and three dimensions (e.g. the sculp- anarchistic beliefs that at the time were causing
ture Horse Rearing of f.1890, Musee d'Orsay), such alarm in European society, he had a
reflected the photographic discoveries of Muy- concern with the welfare of humanity shared
bridge. In about 1896 Degas bought an easily by few, if any, members of the artistic
portable Kodak camera, and he was one of the community in which he lived.
first to use a spool of film. From then onwards Born in Saint-Thomas in the West Indies of a
he became an enthusiastic photographer, fairly affluent family, he was sent to Paris when
165
Pissarro, Camille
C.Ttyimt
Boulevard des Italiens; Morning, Sunlight (1897): in the last decade of his life Pissarro painted some of his
greatest works, including this vivid picture of a crowded boulevard.
young to complete his education, and there later, zola, in his review of the Salon of that
showed his first skills in drawing. After his year, picked out his works for a laudatory
return to the West Indies, his determination to mention.
be an artist led his father eventually to desist On the outbreak of war Pissarro came to
from forcing him into the family business. In London, where branch of his family had
a
1 85 5 he returned to Paris and studied painting at already established itself. Whilst there he pro-
the academie Suisse, where he met monet. An duced some fine landscapes, predominantly of
assiduous searcher-out of suitable contacts, he Norwood and the area in South London
frequently visited the cafe guerbois and got to around the Crystal Palace (Penge Station, Upper
know manet, cezanne, renoir and the rest. Norwood, 1870; Courtauld Institute, London).
Enraptured at first by the work of delacroix, He also met Monet again, and both were in
he soon discovered corot, who gave him contact with durand-ruel, who exhibited
advice and encouragement, and under whose Pissarro's works at his London gallery and with
auspices he had works regularly accepted at the whom he was to maintain a lasting connection.
salon between 1864 and 1869. His paintings When he returned to louveciennes, where
showed the deep influence of Corot in his he had been living just before the war, Pissarro
concern for light and atmosphere, the wide- found that only about 40 paintings out of a total
angle view of landscape and an overall dark, but of 1500 - an extraordinary comment on the
silvery tonality (The Marne at Chennevieres, facility with which he must have worked - had
1 864; National Gallery of Scotland). In 1863 the been left undamaged by the Prussians who had
paintings he had sent to the salon des refuses occupied his house. The following year he
were praised by castagnary and three years moved to pontoise, where he was visited by
166
Pissarro, Lucien
Cezanne. To the latter he expounded the merits His work was enthusiastically praised by
of painting in the open air, a technique in which Octave mirbeau, and his father commented
he had always been interested. Pissarro was warmly on the force and originality of his
deeply involved in the discussions and planning paintings. He died of tuberculosis in London.
which went into preparing for the first impres- There is a portrait of him by Camille in the Tate
sionist exhibition in 1874, and he participated Gallery, London (1881).
not only in that, but in all the subsequent
exhibitions. Later in life, however, he was to Pissarro, Julie (1838-1922) Camille Pissarro
confess about this period 'I remember that, met Julie Vellay, the daughter of a Burgundian
though I was of ardour, I did not have the
full farmer and vine-grower, in i860 when she was
slightest idea, even at the age of 40, of the working as his mother's maid, and started to
profound aspect of the movement which we have an affair with her. This estranged the
pursued instinctively. It was in the air.' His painter from his family, who cut off his
vague discontent with the Impressionist exhibi- allowance. The couple married in London in
tions found some expression in 1875 when he 1870, when Pissarro was a refugee there, by
became associated with Alfred Meyer in setting which time they had already acquired two
up an alternative group, l'union, but by the children; four more were to follow. Julie
time its first exhibition had been arranged in loyally supported her husband during years of
1877 at the Grand Hotel on the boulevard des privation. In 1879 he painted a moving portrait
Capucines, he, as well as Cezanne and guillau- of her sewing close to a window (Ashmolean
min, had resigned. Museum, Oxford).
Pissarro had for some time been discontented
with what he called his 'rough' technique, and Pissarro, Lucien (1 863-1944) The eldest son
c.i 885, having come under the influence of of Camille, he was brought up, as it were, in the
seurat, he began, to everybody's surprise, to bosom of Impressionism and was taught paint-
adopt a modified and softened form of Pointil- ing by with the assistance of others,
his father,
lism (Springtime in Eragny, 1886; Brooks especially manet and cezanne. As a young
Memorial Art Gallery, Memphis). By 1892, man, he came to England and worked under
however, when he had an important and legros, of whose teaching, however, his father
successful one-man exhibition at Durand-
Ruel's, he had judiciously reverted to his earlier
Impressionistic style. Henceforward his finan-
cial position was secure: he bought a house at
167
PI ein-ainsme
cended the less admirable mannerisms of the shows the painter's passion for plein-airisme.
current jm-de-siecle style. Hand-printed, small
in format, these books were issued in very Impressionists. Delaroche emphasized the need
limited editions. The press ceased publishing in to paint in the country and encouraged his
19 1 4. Thereafter his main
was painting
activity students to make trips into the environs of Paris.
intimate views of the English landscape. He had couture did the same, and even took his
a very real influence on securing the complete students on paintings trips to Normandy and
acceptance of Impressionism in England, and the Channel coast to paint seascapes, gleyre also
the correspondence between his father and advised his students, including bazille. renoir
himself is of primary importance to the history and Monet to work en plein air. By the early
of Impressionism. See also illustration 1860s it had become the accepted thing (as
- W.S. Meadmore. Lucien Pissarro (1962) recorded in the goncourts' novel about artistic
life at the period Manette Salomon) for students
Plein-airisme (Open-air painting) The of each atelier to club together to provide funds
notion of the importance of painting landscape for country painting expeditions, usually to the
in situ was in a sense a legacy bequeathed by area around barbizon. All the painters con-
Romanticism to realism. Part of its motivation nected with that place practised some kind of
was that belief in the inspiring and almost open-air painting - with the curious exception
sacramental quality ot nature which had been ot millet, who said that he could remember
an integral part ot the anti-classical bias of art everything he had seen when he got back to his
and literature since the last quarter of the 18th studio - but it was mostly in the form ot
c: here in the open air was a truth far removed sketches or rough outlines which served as a
from the stuffy restraints ot the studio, the basis for more considered working up. This was
conventions of the academic: here too was even true of jongkind. whose paintings so
reality perceived through the eyes, not con- often give the feeling of having been painted on
ceived in the remoteness of the mind. The the spot. Only boudin and daubigny consis-
notion was not entirely new. especially tently painted complete works in the open air.
amongst English painters, and the story of Their influence on the younger generation was
Turner being strapped to the mast of a ship so significant.
that he could paint a storm at sea recurs In 1 866 Monet decided at ville d'avray near
frequently in the writings and letters of many Saint-Cloud to paint a picture entirely in the
later artists - it had an especial appeal to MONET. open air; he dug a trench to accommodate the
The attraction of this approach was also stimu- lower portions of the very large canvas he was
lated by a technical innovation of the 1840s: the using, so that he could easily reach the upper
invention of collapsible tin tubes in which paint part. Renoir at this time was painting land-
could easily be carried about and manipulated scapes in the open, predominantly with a
in the open air. palette-knife technique, and when he exhibited
It would be a gross oversimplification to his portrait ot Use (Folkwang Museum. Essen),
think ot plein-airisme as an innovation of the in 1867, a critic commented on the fact that his
168
Politics
accurate rendition of the colouring of the paintings. But all in all it can be said that plein-
shadows showed that it had been painted out of airisme contributed an essential element to
doors. The group of paintings which Monet, Impressionism. It can indeed be seen as playing
Renoir and sisley produced at argenteuil in the same role that drawing and painting from
the late 1860s was the most spectacular vindica- the life had played for earlier generations of
tion of plein-air painting, of which pissarro had artists as a pictorial discipline, as a field of
by this time become an enthusiastic advocate. experimentation and discovery, and as a stimu-
The approach seemed to have emotional as lus to creativity. See also colour, manet,
well as artistic undercurrents. There was the PHOTOGRAPHY, TECHNIQUE [49, 52, 195, 213]
largely literary feeling of direct communion a Painting from Nature; The Tradition of Open-
with nature in the Romantic tradition; there Air Oil-Sketching from the Seventeenth to the
were suggestions of that passion for the open air Nineteenth Century, Arts Council, London,
which had started to affect society in the first exhibition catalogue (1980); A. Callen, Tech-
half of the century, and which ensured the niques of the Impressionists (1982); J. House,
popularity of country excursions and seaside Monet; Nature into Art (1986)
resorts; there were even moralistic dimensions,
especially apparent in the case of Monet, who Pointillism see seurat, signac
became vehement in his insistence that he did
paint his pictures out-of-doors, even when it Politics For a variety of reasons, left-wing
was evident that he had not. He became politics and art in I9th-c. paris had become
indignant when he heard from durand-ruel inextricably linked. This was partly due to
that it was being suggested he had used geographical factors. The centre of the art
photographs for his paintings of the Houses of world was on the Left Bank, around the ecole
Parliament, adding rather lamely that in any des beaux-arts, an area identified by authority
case it was nobody's concern but his own. It was as troublesome, and unsanitized by the urban
only in he used the
his smaller paintings that renewal which napoleon hi had inflicted on
plein-air approach, however, and it was not Paris to make the building of barricades imposs-
until the waterlily pictures of 19 14 that he ible, and to facilitate the movement of the
undertook large works in the open; his paint- forces of law and order. In addition, artists
ings of Venice were all completed at Giverny tended to frequent the same cafes and social
from sketches done in Italy. On the other hand, centres used by writers and what were generi-
his insistence on accuracy of observation of cally known as 'agitators'. Moreover, the
light effects was remarkable. Often he noted the Romantic image of the artist as rebel, intent on
times of day on the back of canvases, and he said pursuing his own aims contrary to the wishes of
that seven minutes was the length of time he his family and society, had become firmly
could work on any one of the Poplar series 'until established by the 1830s and was enshrined in
the sunlight left a certain leaf. He often had a books such as Henri Murger's Scenes de la vie de
number of canvases in progress at the same Boheme (1847-49) and zola's L'Oeuvre (1886).
time, so that he could work on each according Official art, on the other hand, heavily subsi-
to the appropriate time of day. In 1889 he wrote dized and highly organized, with its elaborate
to a friend, 'I've got everything under control hierarchy of institutions from the Ecole des
and things are progressing nicely with different Beaux-Arts downwards, was seen and used as
motifs chosen for the morning and the after- one of the main props of society. By its imagery
noon, sunlight and grey weather.' On occasions it sanctified the power of the state and the
he would get up before dawn to catch a Tightness of the social order, providing pictures
particular effect, and could spend as many as 60 of the Emperor or the President to confirm
sessions on the same painting. commemorating battles, per-
their significance,
It isimprobable that any of his contemporar- petuating the Napoleonic myth, bodying forth
ies, with the possible exception of Sisley, whose the eternal verities of religion, and codifying, in
life is not well documented, were quite as meticulously painted detail, those sartorial and
besotted with the creative ideology of the open other niceties which established the different
air as Monet was. cezanne, for instance, though ranks of society. Any variation from these
he spent endless days painting under the hot sun officially sanctioned icons, any infraction of the
of Provence, was quite prepared to rely on stylistic syntax that governed their expression,
magazine illustrations for some of his flower was seen as a threat to society.
169
Politics
Politics: a cartoon of 1870 shows the current French view of the European political scene. France
resisting the invasions of Prussia, who has one hand on Holland and the other on Austria.
There was, too, during the latter half of the clothes is especially revealing, and it is interest-
19th c., especially in France, a heightened ing that when Zola and defended
others
sensitivity to such putative dangers as a conse- manet's works they laid special emphasis on the
quence of a series of outrages, usually commit- artist's smart clothes and gentlemanly
ted by, or attributed to, anarchists. In 1858 an demeanour.
attempt was made to assassinate Napoleon III, courbet's political stance, however, helped
and at regular intervals during the next five to identify artistic with political revolution in
decades bombs were thrown into cafes, politi- the public mind, and confirmed the Emperor's
cians were banks were blown up.
assassinated, expressed dislike of his work. When the Com-
The worst fears of the middle classes were mune was established he was elected a represen-
realized in the establishment of the Commune tative of the people and became president of the
in Paris in 1871, even though it was rapidly and Assembly of Artists, which abolished the Ecole
bloodily suppressed. Even before this, the des Beaux-Arts, the awarding of medals and the
paranoia of the establishment had been suc- fine arts section of the institut. In this capacity
cinctly expressed by the sensitive and otherwise he ordered the destruction of Napoleon's
highly cultivated Count nieuwerkerke, Napo- column in the Place Vendome, and when
leon Ill's Minister of the Arts, when he referred government forces occupied Paris on 28 May
to the works of millet and the barbizon School 1 87 1 he was imprisoned, then moved to a
generally: 'This is the art of democrats, of those hospital. He was condemned to rebuild the
who don't change their linen, and who want to column at his own expense, and understandably
put themselves over on men of the world. This fled to Switzerland, where he died in 1877.
art disgusts and displeases me.' In fact, Millet None of the Impressionists, however,
was a political sceptic, a religious agnostic, showed the least degree of involvement in the
whose peasants were closer in feeling to the politically significant events that were taking
bucolic fantasies of the 18th c. than to any wild place at this time, monet and pissarro were
revolutionary principles. The identificationof ensconced in London; renoir and sisley
safely
political and artistic unreliability with dirty had gone back to the forest of Fontainebleau;
170
Politics
Politics: sentence being pronounced by a military court on those involved in the Commune; Courbet is in
the back row on the left. From Le Monde illustre, 4 September 1871.
tion, has been replaced by an extra 25 centimes a violent suppression of the Commune, 1871.
171
Pontoise
day'; 'Education is the downfall of the people'; standing or social status; they frequently
official
'We are living in an age of decadence, where chose subjects depicting aspects of working-
people think of nothing but travelling at dozens class life- though the main source of imagery
of kilometres an hour'; 'Jews come to France to was the life of the middle classes and it is ironic
earn money, but if there is any fighting to be that it was Degas, probably the most reaction-
done they hide behind a tree' - and then, a few ary member of the group, who went furthest in
lines later, 'There are a lot of Jews in the army breaking down accepted conventions by his
because they like to walk about wearing preoccupation with working girls, prostitutes
uniforms.' During the early part of his life, and other of those 'lower
representatives
Degas seems to have had no very strong orders' who werethought to constitute a
political views, beyond a certain scepticism. potential threat to society. See also castagn-
But the Dreyfus of 189394, which did so
affair ARY, DURET, FENEON [89, 92, 130, 21 3]
much to polarize French public opinion, Clark (1984); J. Seigel, Bohemian Paris:
revealed him as a confirmed conservative who Culture, Politics and the Boundaries of Bourgeois
rejected all hisjewish friends, even those of long Life 1830-1930 (1986); P. Mainardi, Art and
standing such as the halevys. Cezanne, who Politics of the Second Empire. The Universal
had also gone back to his earlier religious beliefs Expositions of 1853 and 1867 (1987); Zeldin
in the cosy provincial security of aix-en- (1988)
provence, was an anti-Dreyfusard. Monet, on
the other hand, signed the so-called 'Petition of Pontoise A small village on the river Oise near
the Intellectuals' calling for a new trial, though auvers that first became popular with painters
this was due rather to his friendship with of the barbizon School, pissarro first settled
CLEMENCEAU than to any very deeply held left- there in 1866 (The Hermitage at Pontoise, 1867;
wing opinions. Pissarro, the exception, was a Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum, New
convinced radical with anarchistical leanings; York), and returned again after the franco-
always concerned about injustice, he produced prussian war. There he met daubigny, and on
a number of impassioned cartoons for left-wing at least one occasion they painted very similar
journals. versions of the same area (Pissarro: The Cote du
Facts have do with opinions, and in
little to Jallais, near Pontoise, 1867; Metropolitan
the public mind were seen as
the Impressionists Museum, New York, and Daubigny, The
political revolutionaries; their art was con-
demned invariably as being an onslaught on the
established order. Nor was this attitude con-
fined to France. Reviewing the 1883 Durand-
Ruel exhibition in London, The Times critic
commented on the artists as being 'the chosen
representatives of the Extreme Left', and ten
years later the National Observer characterized
Monet's art as 'the very anarchy of painting'. In
1904 E. Wake Cook published a book, Anarchy
in Art and Chaos in Criticism, in which he
172
Portraiture
especially were already conforming to the ster- family - constantly observed, suffused with
eotype that Renoir was to make so specifically affection respect appear as icons of
or
his own, the picture had a considerable success domestic felicity: monet's pictures of his wife;
when it was exhibited at the salon of 1879. cezanne's of his father; Renoir's of his children;
Analogous in many ways was manet's 1877 and degas' remarkable series of the Italian
portrait of faure as Hamlet in Ambroise members of his family, grave, with echoes of
Thomas' opera, the work with which, as a the Renaissance in their stately posed profiles
singer, he was most closely identified, and to and their clear limpid gaze all these are
which he owed some of his phenomenal milestones in the history of portraiture. Then
success. Faure was one of the most active they painted portraits of each other: bazille
collectors of works by the Impressionists, an painted Monet after his accident at the Inn in
activity not untinged with speculative con- Chailly (1866; Musee d'Orsay); Renoir painted
siderations - and so, in a sense, it was an act of sisley in the cabaret de la mere anthony
patronage. But it was also something of a (1866; Nationalmuseum, Stockholm) and with
publicity exercise, since it was clearly good for his wife (1868; Wallraf-Richartz-Museum,
an actor or musician to have his or her portrait Cologne), as well as Bazille at his easel (1867;
in the Salon. In the event, the work was not a Musee d'Orsay); guillaumin showed pissarro
success; it was slated by the critics, and Faure apparently painting some blinds (1868; Musee
173
Portraiture
174
Post-Impressionism
members of his family on the terrace of their Phillips Collection,Washington) involve the
house near Montpellier (1868-69; Musee d'Or- same degree of interpersonal relationships.
say), comes closer in feeling to the carefully In their portraits the Impressionists looked
staged set pieces of a Winterhalter, and is in for a degree of psychological realism, and were
sharp contrast to his view of his own studio in just as concerned with the depiction of person-
the rue de la Condamine (Musee d'Orsay) ality as their more traditionalist contemporar-
painted the following year, with its sense of ies. But they used a weaponry more extensive
spontaneous observation. How explicit this than the usual 'expressive' eyes and stylized
'conversation piece' element often was in the features to achieve this. The whole body of the
Impressionists' approach can be realized from sitter, his or her pose, the clothes, the accoutre-
the fact that when Degas painted the interior of ments with which the sitter is surrounded: all
the Cotton Exchange in New Orleans, he these were utilized to depict people not sub
deliberately entitled it Portraits in an Office specie aeternitatis, but as sentient human beings
(1873; Musee des Beaux-Arts, Pau). Even to the one particular moment in time. See also
alive at
most apparently straightforward portraits, such TECHNIQUE [17,28, JO, 37, 47,57, 65,90, 131, 162,
as that of himself and Evariste de valernes 164, 205, 208, 222]
(1865; Musee d'Orsay), he gave an added T. Reff, 'Pissarro's portrait of Cezanne', in
suggestion of recently spoken words and un- Burlington Magazine, CIX (1967); D. Gordon,
finished dialogue. Renoir's great group por- Edgar Degas; Helene Rouart in Her Father's
traits - for this is what they really are The Studio (1984); M. McQuillan, Impressionist
Boating Party at Chatou (1879; National Gallery Portraits (1986)
of Art, Washington), Dancing at the Moulin de la
Galette (1876; John Hay Whitney Collection, Post-Impressionism Although obviously
New York) and the Dejeuner des canotiers (1881; meaning anything that happened after
Post-Impressionism: Cezanne's Bathers of 1876 shows that quest for structural solidity which was,
sense, alien to much Impressionist thinking.
175
Prices
Impressionism, the word is of imprecise and Impressionism was a reaction against the appar-
sometimes contradictory meaning. It was ently formless nature of Impressionist painting,
popularized in the English-speaking world after and an attempt to create plastic form rather than
it was first used to describe an exhibition held at to describe - a view popularized by Clive Bell
it
the Grafton Galleries in London in 1910, in his Art of 1914. The relationship to Cezanne
entitled, 'Manet and the Post-Impressionists'. was well taken, and much play was made about
This contained 21 works by cezanne, 41 by his well-known reference to Poussin. Artists
gauguin, and two each by seurat and signac, such as Picasso and Matisse were included in the
whom the French more accurately describe as category of Post-Impressionists, and there was a
neo-impressionnistes', in that they pushed to clear link with Cubism. More recently, how-
their logical extremes many of the basic techni- ever, the word has been used as an umbrella
cal devices and attitudes of the Impressionists, description for many different tendencies
and so eventually negated them. between about 1890 and 191 4 which express a
In the preface to the catalogue of the second stylistic reaction against one or other of the
Post-Impressionist exhibition of 1912, Roger characteristic features of Impressionism. See
Fry commented on the 'classic spirit' of the also BERNARD, ENGLAND, FENEON, INDEPEN-
work on show, and anchored it to Cezanne. He DANTS, VOLLARD [jl, 101, 10.J 210] ,
put forward the plausible theory that Post- S. Lovegren, The Genesis of Modernism
(1959); Post-Impressionism, Royal Academy,
London, exhibition catalogue (1959); R. Shat-
tuck, The Banquet Years (1959); J. Rewald, Post-
Impressionism (1956)
176
Prices
177
Prints
BellelliFamily of 1858, but only 60,000 for the became apparent; until
scale personal publicity
Battle Scene of 1865. Almost from the begin- the invention of photogravure by Karl Klic in
ning, Degas' pastel works fetched compara- Vienna in 1879 there were no satisfactory ways
tively high prices. Three years before the artist's of mass-producing images beyond those
death, Sir William Eden, whistler's patron, controlled by manual dexterity, and gauguin
bought one 4620, and at the studio sale in
for was expressing a common thought in 1899
19 1 8, the though much fewer in
pastels, when he wrote to tell van gogh that he 'had
number than the oil paintings, made compara- commenced a series of lithographs for publica-
tively more. This tendency has persisted into tion in order to make myself known.'
quite recent times. In 1928 William Cargill paid manet was one of the first to exploit the idea,
12,800 for a ballet painting in oils and 4200 and was a founding member of the Societe des
for one in pastel. In 1963 the pastel sold for Aquafortistes, established in 1862 to promote
,105,000, a 25-fold rise, whilst the oil made interest in etching. He produced two portfolios
only 55,000, a 4-fold rise. of etchings most of them based on
at the time,
The pattern of Renoir's financial success was his paintings, and in 1867 did a version of
similar to that of Monet, though his early Olympia in the same medium to accompany a
triumphs at the Salon meant that he got off to an projected booklet by zola, defending the
earlier start. In 1912 the Ride in the Bois de independent exhibition that Manet had orga-
Boulogne of 1873 was sold for 52,500 francs, and nized in that year. He also produced a number
after his death the contents of his studio, of lithographs, sometimes using the same work
consisting of 103 paintings and drawings, was for differing techniques: the painting Berthe
acquired by the Galerie Barbezanges for 1^ Morisot with a Bunch of Violets (1872; Private
million francs, pissarro, on the other hand, collection), for instance, was translated into an
never really commanded high prices. In the etching, in which Manet followed the original
Durand-Ruel archives there is a copy of the quite closely, and into two lithographs, in
catalogue of the second impressionist exhibi- which the painting was used mainly as a pretext
tion of 1 876, in which are pencilled the prices of for experimenting with the juxtaposition of
his works; they range from 1000 francs for masses of black and white. It seems that when
Printemps; soleil couchant to 400 francs for Neige, making prints from his paintings Manet used
coteaux de V Hermitage . Even in 1912, five of his photographs of them, several of which survive
landscapes only made a total of 23,000 francs at
the rouart sale, though The Thames at Charing
Cross, which in 1937 was bought by Cargill for
2600, reached 47,000 sixteen years later. See
also DEUDON, DURET, ENGLAND, GAUGUIN, THEO
VAN GOGH, HOTEL DROUOT, KHALIL BEY, PERE
MARTIN [17, JO, 40, 162]
nVentun (1939); H.C. and C.A. White, .,-" *,
Canvases and Careers (1965); G. Reitlinger, The /
Economics of Taste, 3 vols. (1970) i OKI ! S
^
178
Proust, Antonin
drawing executed in an oily ink through the louse-Lautrec; French Lithographs i860 1 goo
press. Some of these he translated into litho- (1978); C.S. Ives, 'French Prints in the Era of
graphs, others he used as the foundation of Impressionism and Symbolism', in Metropoli-
multi-media works involving, for instance, tan Museum of Art Bulletin (Summer 1988)
pastel and charcoal. With most of his litho-
graphs Degas started with a completely inked Prix de Rome see ecole des beaux-arts
stone, from which light forms were then
extracted, sometimes with an elaborate system Proust, Antonin (1 832-1905) He was a fellow
of smudging to create a sfumato effect. His pupil of manet's at the College Rollin in 1842,
concern with the minutiae of the processes and they remained close friends throughout
involved is reflected in his letters to cassatt, their lives; Proust's eventual success as a politi-
who herself produced a large number of prints, cian and as an influential figure in Parisian
very much under his influence, and to pissarro, society was toprove of great value to Manet
who became an enthusiastic producer of prints specifically,and to the Impressionists generally.
in almost every medium. He started his career as thefounder of a
It was Degas who by constant encourage- magazine, La Semaine universelle, and became
ment after 1878 impelled Pissarro to greater secretary to Gambetta as the latter was rising to
adventurousness and to experiment with such power. As a consequence, during the franco-
unconventional tools as wire brushes and sand- prussian war of 1 870-7 1 he became minister in
paper. When Degas proposed (the project charge of the refugees who were flocking into
179
Puvis de Chavannes, Pierre
faris,and subsequently rose through the politi- journey to Italy. He was basically a Romantic,
calhierarchy of the Third Republic, becoming preoccupied with rather naive idealistic con-
Minister of Fine Arts 188182, and Commis- cepts, but driven to express them in an aca-
sioner for Fine Arts at the Paris Exposition demic idiom, which owed a great deal to
Universelle of 1889. In 1892 he was implicated Ingres. Theoretically, he was hostile to the
but acquitted.
in a financial-political scandal, notion of the academic tradition, though he was
In 1880he obtained the Legion of Honour very largely fettered by it; theoretically, too, he
for Manet, and he pronounced an oration at a was opposed to the spontaneous naturalism of
banquet organized by Manet's family and the Impressionists, though he was very friendly
friends to celebrate the commemorative exhibi- to them, and indeed was regarded by the
tion of his works held at the ecole des beaux- general public as part of that avant-garde of
arts in 1884. In 1897 he wrote a lengthy article which the Impressionists were the most out-
in the Revue blanche, entitled, 'Souvenirs de standing exemplars.
Manet', which in an expanded form was He was one of the first to appreciate the
published posthumously as a book in 191 3. works of degas, with whom throughout his life
Manet painted a portrait of Proust in 1880 he was to remain on very friendly terms. He
(Toledo Museum of Art, Ohio), which was was also very close to morisot, who was always
damned with faint praise by zola and huys- ready to take his advice on technical matters; he
mans. In the following year Proust com- met Renoir, manet and others at the house of
missioned Manet to paint four portraits of Alfred stevens, and in 1888 made a generous
women to represent the four seasons. Only two contribution to the fund which monet was
were finished: Jeanne; (Fogg Art
Spring raising tobuy Manet's Olympia for the nation.
Museum, Cambridge, and Autumn
Mass.) Preoccupied with mural and large-scale public
(Musee des Beaux-Arts, Nancy); the former art, which he painted in flat areas of colour,
was a portrait of the young actress Jeanne often with symbolic undercurrents to the
Demarsy, the latter of the popular and success- subject-matter, he came to exert a considerable
ful demi-mondaine Mery laurent, who influence on the generation of seurat and
enjoyed the unique distinction of having been gauguin, as well as on painters such as Odilon
the mistress of Marshal Canrobert, of Crimean Redon and the Nabis. One of his favourite
War fame, and of the Empress Eugenie's models was Suzanne valadon [134].
dentist, [no] L. Worth, Puvis de Chavannes (1926); R.J.
Wattenmaker, Puvis de Chavannes and the
Puvis de Chavannes, Pierre (1824-98) Modern Tradition (1975); Puvis de Chavannes,
Trained as an engineer, he took up painting as a Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition catalogue (1983)
result of the impressions made on him by a
R
Raffaelli, Jean-Francis (1 850-1924) Even
though he participated in the impressionist
exhibitions of 1880 and 1881, and although his
work showed considerable affinities with that
of manet's early period, and in certain ways
with that of CAiLLEBOTTE, he was really closer to
an older tradition of realism. Except towards
the end of his life, his colours were sombre and
lacked that sparkle which was so characteristic
of quintessential Impressionism. He was an
Puvis de Chavannes' Hope (1872) was copied by habitue of the cafe guerbois, and, because his
Gauguin in 1895. works dealt predominantly with urban genre
80
Railways
The railway bridge atAsnieres in the late 19th c, by which time vast expansion of the rail network had
brought many towns along the Seine within easy reach of Paris.
181
Rashdall, Edward
before possessed, making possible, for instance, under Francis Bate. A friend of monet, he was
thedevelopment of those more remote Parisian acquainted with the other Impressionists, and
suburbs that provided the Impressionists with was especially interested in the analysis of their
one of their favourite themes. It opened up to technique, about which he wrote extensively
painters a range of landscape possibilities that in in the columns of the Artist. In the year of his
the past would have been closed to them, and in early death he contributed to that magazine a
bringing the resorts of Provence and the most percipient study of Monet's work.
Mediterranean coast within reach of all, it
provided painters such as renoir with subject- Realism is a word with several meanings in the
matter that radically changed the nature of their context of art, most of them overlapping or
art. monet travelled as far afield as England, closeenough to create an element of ambiguity.
Holland, Norway, Spain, Switzerland, italy There is the initial sense of the faithful depiction
and Africa. When cezanne first went from aix of perceived reality, seen as the antithesis of
to paris, the journey took the best part of three abstract or non-figurative art. Secondly, real-
days. By the 1890s it took a day. ism can be taken to mean those styles of art that
The railway appealed to the Impressionists as eschew distortion, and present acceptable 'pho-
a symbol of progress and of modern life. Monet tographic' images. Finally, it can be used to
was especially intrigued by trains, even when describe the work of those artists who choose
living in the country, and produced in 1870 Le 'real' subjects drawn from ordinary, usually
Train dans la campagne (Musee d'Orsay), in 1872 lower-class or prosaic surroundings. Within
Le Convoi du chemin de fer (Private collection), thisrange of definitions can be included a very
and in 1875 Le Train dans la neige a Argenteuil wide variety of artists - Bruegel, Caravaggio,
(Private collection). Then he turned his atten- Chardin, Hogarth, Murillo, Zurbaran, Hol-
tion to the Gare Saint-Lazare, exhibiting eight man Hunt, Wilkie, Copley and Hockney; all
paintings of it at the 1877 Impressionist exhibi- represent different dimensions of 'realism'.
tion (one of the most powerfully evocative is in
the Fogg Art Museum, Cambridge, Mass.). In
1 87 1 pissarro painted two pictures of engines
Rashdall, Edward (1 860-1 888) After leaving Zola, the Emperor of Realism, rides on top of the
Oxford, he went to Paris, and studied painting Vendome Column, 1880.
182
Realism
In the context of Impressionism, however, Chardin painting pots are as much masters as
the word has amore specific meaning. It Raphael painting Madonnas. . The portrait
. .
describes a movement, or perhaps one might of the worker in his smock is certainly worth as
better describe it as an attitude, which played an much as that of a prince in his golden robes.'
important role in art, and indeed in literature, There were many impulses that made artists
during a large part of the 19th c. Time and time and writers of the 19th c. look more closely at
again critics, painters and writers emphasized contemporary reality. The population explo-
both its historical precedents and its current sion of the first half of the century and the rapid
relevance. Claude Lantier, zola's artist-hero of growth of conurbations brought much larger
L'Oeuvre (1886), expressed the underlying numbers of people into intimate contact with
notion with the author's usual vigour when he each other. In addition, there was an inevitable
said that he preferred painting a pile of cabbage stylistic revulsion against the escapist fantasies
to all the historical bric-a-brac of the Roman- which had characterized so much Romantic
tics, and that a bunch of carrots honestly and art. And there were important political dimen-
directly painted on the spot was preferable to all sions: Realism was equated with radicalism,
the high-faluting subject-matter of academic with the left wing; it was the art of an embattled
painters: 'The day is coming when a single democracy, and this was highlighted by the
original carrot will be pregnant with revolu- career of the most vociferous of the early
tion.' Theophile thore wrote in 1863, 'If a apostles of Realism, courbet went out of his
painter is possessed of an original feeling for way not only to paint scenes of ordinary life,
nature and a personal method of execution, but to do so with a technique that by its
even if he applies them to the most inferior frequent 'brutality', as his critics called it,
subjects, he is master of his art and in his art. emphasized the lack of those seductive graces
Murillo in his Young Beggar is as much a master that characterized Salon paintings. But though
as in his Assumption of the Virgin. Brouwer and there was a political dimension to Realism, it
Manet, Dejeuner sur I'herbe, 1863: the painting was criticized for its excessive realism, and for
replacing graceful historical dress with 'the horrible modern French costume'.
183
Renoir, Edmond
did not necessarily imply, as it would do in the what might be described as 'temporal realism',
next century, political conviction, manet, the abandonment of the older convention of
many of whose works (e.g. Boy with
earlier pictorial sequence of action, for the disjointed
Cherries, 1859; Calouste Gulbenkian Founda- observation of a moment in time. In caille-
tion, Lisbon) were idealized, went on to make botte's Rue de Paris; temps de pluie (1877; Art
what was possibly the most publicized state- Institute of Chicago) the viewpoint has been
ment of Realism in the Dejeuner sur I'herbe chosen purely arbitrarily; it imposes no pers-
(1863; Musee d'Orsay); the painting aroused pectival unity on the composition; the various
such horror, not because of the naked woman, figures walking in different directions, regard-
but because, in the words of Philip hamerton, a less of each other as in 'real' life - have not
contemporary English critic, 'Some wretched been cajoled into any pictorial pattern, and no
Frenchman has translated the fete champetre into attempt has been made even to hint at visual
modern French realism, and with the horrible logic in fact one pedestrian is indicated only
modern French costume instead of the graceful by his left side, part of his arm, the side of his
Venetian one.' Manet continued to concern face, and his umbrella. By contrast, the vortex-
himself with modern life, but though he was like pull of the architectural setting imposes a
scepticalabout the political establishment, he sense of the dominance of an urban scene which
could by no means be thought of as a propa- was part of the psychological reality of contem-
gandist of democracy, still less as an admirer of porary life.
the proletariat. In a wider sense, of course, the century was
This was even more true of degas, whose hypnotized by that concept of a tangible and
quest for the of brothels and the
realism measurable reality which could be expressed in
intimacies of the boudoir and bathroom was scientific terms. The aim of the Impressionists,
equalled only by that of another aristocratic both in technique and choice of subject-matter,
observer, Toulouse-Lautrec. The sense of could be described as the quest for objective
something approaching disdain, with which truth - what Zola, in his review of the 1866
this pre-eminently conservative and even reac- salon described as 'the exact study of facts and
tionary man viewed the subjects that he was so things'. The exact study of light and shade, the
concerned to describe, had very close analogies exact analysis of how colour actually appears to
with the goncourts' approach to similar the eye, the exact impact the landscape makes
themes in literature. on the eye when painted out of doors, and the
Without pursuing so vigorously the less overall substitution in art of the perceptual for
entrancing aspects of Realism, all the Impres- the conceptual, seemed to those who were
sionists chose subjects from ordinary life, if not involved the very essence of that pursuit of
of the proletariat, at least of the petite bourgeoi- reality which characterized the activities of the
sie:boating parties, seaside excursions, public scientist. Realism in all its aspects was to the
dances. They painted Parisian streets, railway Impressionists not so much a programme, more
stations, the boulevards; never before had a a way of life. See also burty, castagnary,
whole group of painters been so devoted to the CHAMPFLEURY, DAUDET, LITERATURE, MEDAN,
urban scene. There were, of course, occasional MOORE [24, 183]
lapses. Though monet could bisect his land- L. Rosenthal, Du Romantistne au realisme
scapes with railway viaducts, and pissarro (1914); L. Nochlin, Realism (1971); Clark
could depict railway engines in South London, (i973b)
both were quite capable of tidying up the scenes
they were painting by removing unsightly Renoir, Edmond (1849 c. 1943) Eight years
factory chimneys. younger than his more famous brother,
But Realism was not necessarily confined to Edmond spent much of with
his earlier life
the choice of subject-matter. It betrayed itself in Auguste, joining him, for instance, on trips to
attitudes to portraiture, in the quest for the the CABARET DE LA MERE ANTHONY at Marlotte.
unposed, revelatory stance, in the careless array In 1867 Edmond started a career as a journalist,
of accessories scraps of notepaper, opened but the franco-prussian war intervened and
books, pipes and the impedimenta of daily life. both brothers, after serving in the army, met
Such aspects of Realism were clearly related to again in paris shortly afterwards. It was during
the spread of photography and the example of this period that Edmond participated most
the unselective eye of the camera. So, too, was closely in his brother's work, sometimes asking
184
Renoir, Pierre-Auguste
M
Rewald, 'Auguste Renoir and his brother', in
) <
Studies in Impressionism (1985)
185
Renoir, Pierre-Auguste
186
Renoir family
Renoir, The Moulin de la Galette, 1876. Though this sparkling painting evokes a random moment in
time, the strength of the composition reveals Renoir as heir to the mainstream European tradition.
gave women a seductive appearance in his outside the classics. To please a student, even the
paintings, and conferred charms on those who most princely, musician could not add
a
had none, he generally took no pleasure in another note to the seven on the scale. He must
converse with them. With a few exceptions he always come back to the first one again. Well,
only liked women as models'; and he himself in art it is the same thing. But one must see that
once said 'I paint women as I would paint the classic may
appear in any period. Poussin
carrots.' He was often moody and introverted; was a classic; Pere corot was a classic' Renoir
his political ideas were both naive and reaction- died on 3 December 19 19 and was buried next
ary, and he vaguely subscribed to a series of to his wife Aline in the cemetery at Essoyes. See
rather muddled religious beliefs. His schemes also BARNES, BAUDOT, BURGER, CABARET DE LA
for a 'Societe des Irregularistes', drawn up in MERE ANTHONY, COURBET, DIAZ, DORIA, ENG-
1884, give some indication of his ingenuous- LAND, l'estaque, FAIVRE, GOBILLARD, LA GRE-
ness. At the same time, however, he was quite NOUILLERE, ILLUSTRATION, L'lMPRESSIONNISTE,
widely read, an able and often witty letter- ITALY, LECOEUR, MONTMARTRE, MUSIC, PASTELS,
writer, interested in contemporary music as PHILLIPS COLLECTION, PORTRAITURE, RESTAURANT
well as literature. He wrote a long and FOURNAISE, SOCIAL BACKGROUND, VILLE d'AVRAY
interesting introduction to a French translation [28, 31, 37, 47, 48, 4Q, 53, 86, 117, 149, 162, 185,
of Cennino Cennini's 17 Libro dell' Arte in which 188, igg, 208, 213, 220, 225]
he expounded a rather Romantic credo based G. Riviere, Renoir et ses amis (1921); B.E.
on the notion that art was decaying through its White, Renoir (1984); Renoir, Hay ward Gal-
'lack of an ideal'. More specifically, however, in lery, London, exhibition catalogue (1985)
an interview with the American Walter Pach,
published in Scribner's Magazine in May 1912, Renoir family In 1879 Renoir met Aline
he was explicit about the element of traditiona- Chahgot, a 20-year-old girl from Essoyes in
lism that underlay his work: 'There is nothing Burgundy, who was living with her mother, a
187
J
Restaurant Fournaise
dressmaker. Aline was contributing to the Riviere, Georges (1855 1943) Writer and art
family income - had left them - by
the father critic, he was a close friend of renoir, who
doing laundry work for both Renoir and painted him as one of the figures in Dancing at
monet, who were living nearby. She rapidly the Moulin de la Galette (1876; Mr and Mrs John
became Renoir's favourite model, and then his Hay Whitney, New York) and more promi-
mistress. In 1885 they had a son, who was nently as one of five figures in The Artist's
named Pierre, but Renoir hid their existence Studio, rue Saint-Georges (1876; Collection
from those of his friends, such as Berthe Santa Marina, Buenos Aires). It was Renoir
morisot and the manets who, he thought, who in 1877 persuaded Riviere to bring out a
might be repelled by Aline's obvious peasant periodical to defend the Impressionists, a notion
origins. This attitude persisted even after their that had been canvassed some four years earlier
eventual marriage in July 1890. in the original charter of the group. The
Three years after their marriage they had resulting LTmpressionniste, journal d'art ran to
another son, named Jean, and then in 1901, between 6 and 28 April. It was almost
five issues
when the painter was 60, a Claude,
third, entirely writtenby Riviere, who was not the
nicknamed 'Coco'. Renoir found in Aline and most inspired of critics, and it attracted little
the children a constant source of inspiration, attention. Some 40 years later, however, he
and produced numerous paintings and draw- produced a number of books of considerable
ings of them. An almost compulsive eater, she value, including Renoir et ses amis (1921); he
died of a heart-attack in 191 5. Pierre, who died Maitre Paul Cezanne (1923) and M. Degas,
in 1952, was buried in the same grave as his bourgeois de Paris (1935). See also l'artiste,
father and mother. Jean, the famous film- houssaye, l'impressionniste [116
producer, wrote a number of interesting books G. Riviere, Renoir et ses amis (1921); Venturi
about his father. (1939)
Rouart, Henri
89
Rousseau, Theodore
accepted, and he made no further technical Alphonse Karr, who also established various
advances in his painting. See also arrowsmith new plants and flowers along the bay. Its other
A. Sensier, Souvenirs sur Theodore Rousseau amenities included a casino and two light-
(1872); A. Terrasse, L'Univers de Theodore houses. Basically it was a fishing village, and
Rousseau (1976) monet, having first visited it in his childhood,
returned there in 1867 and produced a whole
Rouviere, Philibert (1809-65) Trained orig- series of paintings, including The Beach at
inally as a painter, and working in the atelier of Sainte-Adresse (Art Institute of Chicago) and
Baron Gros, he exhibited at the salon between Terrace at Sainte-Adresse (Metropolitan
1 83 1 and 1837. Then he turned to acting and Museum, New York).
190
Salon
and remained in force until 1870, although something about it in 18 different issues of
during this period several changes took place. charivari. Books and explanatory pamphlets
napoleon in tried to court popularity with the were also published.
artists by allocating them seats on the selection Although originally the opening date of the
jury. In 1852 they were given half, and in 1864 Salon had varied, by 1830 it had become
nine out of fourteen. A certain conservatism, established that it should open between 1 March
however, still remained, because only those and 15 June. In the 18th c. the Salon had been
artistswho had previously won medals at the held in the Salon Carre of the Louvre - hence its
Salon were allowed to sit on the jury. In 1861, name but it soon outgrew that restricted
7000 works were submitted and only 4097 space, and various other locations were tried. A
accepted, while in 1863 the figures were 5000 more or less permanent home was not found
and 2217. In the latter year it had been until after the Exposition Universelle of 1855,
announced that those who had won first- or when the Palais de l'lndustrie, built for the
second-class medals need no longer submit to exhibition, was converted into a public gallery
191
Salon des Refuses
Gervex, whose speciality was recording scenes from current life, pain ted th is view of the jury of the Salon
des Artistes Francais at work in 1885.
housing the annual showing of the Salon. The there, under the broad glass roof, you see a great
actual opening day was one of the major events number of statues . . . after looking at these the
in the Parisian calendar, and was enthusiasti- majority of the spectators stop at the restaurant
cally described in the Fine Arts Quarterly Review there established.' There were variable charges
for May 1863 by Philip hamerton: 'Entering for entry, according either to the time of day or
there, the visitors find themselves at the foot of a the day of the week (Sundays, and sometimes
magnificent staircase of white stone, on ascend- Thursdays, were free). In 1876, for instance,
ing which they arrive at the exhibition of there were 518,892 visitors, of whom 185,000
pictures, which is on the upper floor and paid admission fees.
extends the whole length of the room, with It was which
clearly an agreeable context in
tent-like ceilings of white canvas to subdue the artists, journalists, and patrons met to
dealers
glare from the glass roof. There are three large their mutual advantage. But it was immensely
halls, one in the middle and one at each end of popular, too; a unique opportunity, in a world
the building, with a double line of lower rooms where reproduction processes offered the
between. The halls at the two ends open upon general public only a rough approximation of
two other magnificent staircases, where the what contemporary art looked like, to see
wearied traveller may refresh himself with actual paintings. See also boussod and vala-
brioches and babas and Malaga or Xerxes to his DON, COROT, CRITICS, DURET, INDEPENDANTS,
liking. A plan much to be recommended is to NIEUWERKERKE, WALEWSKI, ZOLA [47, 174]
eat a baba and drink a glass of Malaga at one 3 Letheve (1972); Boime (1986); Milner (1988)
end, then to march steadily to the other, and
repeat the dose. You then descend at the other Salon des Refuses On 15 January 1863 the
end of the building into the garden, which Comte de nieuwerkerke announced new regu-
occupies the whole of the immense nave and lations for entry to the salon. The good news -
192
Salon des Refuses
for some at least was that artists who had the rejected works shall be exhibited in another
already won first- or second-class medals in part of the Palais de l'lndustrie. This Exhibition
previous Salons no longer had to submit their will be voluntary, and artists who do not wish
entries to a jury. The bad news was that entries to participate need only inform the administ-
for all were limited to three. On the whole, ration of the exhibition, which will hasten to
therefore, this was a move that favoured return theirworks to them.'
established artists at the expense of newcomers. The reaction amongst artists was curiously
This became apparent in April when the jury's ambivalent. In the words of castagnary:
decisions were announced. Some 5000 works 'When the news broke, the studios were
had been submitted, 2217 accepted; the number thrown into a state of frenzy; people laughed,
of exhibitors had from 1289 in 1862 to
fallen cried and embraced each other. But the first
Horace Vernet, a
988. Because of the death of rush of feeling gave way to doubt. What should
famous academic artist, there had been 13 an artist do? To might mean exposing
exhibit
rather than the usual 14 members of the jury, oneself to the derision of the public. Not to
but two of them, Ingres and delacroix,
at least exhibitmeant confessing to one's lack of ability
had taken no part in the deliberations, and the and,from another point of view, it could mean
most influential voice had been that of the admitting that the jury was right.'
embattled traditionalist Emile Signol, who was In the event, quite a considerable number of
renowned for his history paintings. Amongst artists did withdraw their works, but those who
the artists who
had been rejected were manet, decided to participate in what was coming to be
who had submitted three works including his known unofficially as the Salon des Refuses,
Dejeuner sur I'herhe (1862; Musee d'Orsay), formed a committee to look after their interests.
legros, whistler, Harpignies, pissarro, jong- The rooms used in the annexe, designed for the
kind and fantin-latour, who, although he exhibition, were decorated in the same style as
had one work accepted, had two others thrown the official Salon, but there was no ordered
out. hanging of the pictures, a fact which tended to
The outcry was immediate and vociferous, accentuate the sense of stylistic confusion. The
because numerous other regular exhibitors had exhibition opened on 17 May and over 10,000
alsobeen rejected. Notable amongst these was
Paul Cesar Gariot, who had submitted four
decorative panels, commissioned for the
Empress Eugenie's salon in the Elysee Palace.
Perhaps it was this as much as the more general
outcry that prompted the Emperor to visit the
Salon at the Palais de l'lndustrie, in the com-
pany of Philippe de chennevieres, who had
been responsible for hanging the exhibition. He
expressed great surprise at the severity of the
jury. On his return to the Elysee he sent for
Nieuwerkerke, who could not be found.
Instead, he had to deal with a subordinate,
whom he told that the jury must be recalled and
asked to reverse some of their decisions. It was
pointed out to him, however, that if such a
course were adopted the jury might resign en
bloc, which would create an awkward situation,
with possible political undercurrents. The
Emperor decided, therefore, on an entirely
novel solution. On 24 April the Moniteur
universel contained the following notice:
'Numerous complaints have reached the
Emperor on the subject of works of art which
have been refused by the jury of the Exhibition.
His Majesty, wishing to let the public judge the Salon des Refuses: Daumier cartoon, 1848. An
legitimacy of these complaints, has decided that work is rejected by the Salon.
artist's
193
Sargent, John Singer
people turned up on the first day, a figure that Baudelaire (1944); I. Dunlop, The Shock of the
was more than maintained subsequently. In New (1972); Rewald (1973)
fact, it was noted that more people were visiting
this exhibition than the official Salon; Cham Sargent, John Singer (1856-1925) An expa-
had cartoon showing two artists in conver-
a triate American, he showed remarkable techni-
sation, one saying 'My painting has been cal precocity as a painter. After studying with
accepted, but nobody is looking at it', whereat carolus-duran, he achieved a great reputation
the other replies, 'Mine is with those that have for his portraits, employing a style that could be
been refused, and there is a crush to see it.' The seen as derived from Velazquez by way of
popularity of the exhibition did not reflect a manet. Moving in the circle of the Impressio-
heightened aesthetic sensibility amongst the nists, he came to know most of them, and they
Parisian public, zola's subsequent account in reacted to his work in varying ways, degas, as
L'Oeuvre, the preliminary draft of which was might have been expected, was brutally dismis-
drawn up in 1869, emphasized the general sive; pissarro, in sending his son to see him in
atmosphere of ostentatious hilarity, especially London, where Sargent spent the major part of
in front of Manet's Dejeuner sur Vherbe, which his working life, described him as 'an adroit
came to be seen as the star turn of the exhibition: performer'; but with monet he had a close and
'Shafts of wit fell thicker here than anywhere mutually profitable relationship. In the 1 880s he
else. It was the was the main target
subject that began to paint landscapes that were overtly
for jokes. Nobody understood it. Everybody Impressionist in technique and approach,
thought that it was "mad" and "killingly despite a certain superficiality. At this time he
funny".' Nor were most of the critics any visited Monet at giverny on several occasions,
more reasonable, most of them believing that painting two memorable portraits of him:
Manet had deliberately set out to annoy and Claude Monet Painting at the Edge of a Wood
provoke. Whistler's White Girl, however, (c.1885; Tate Gallery, London) and Claude
which the year before had been rejected by the Monet in his Bateau-Atelier (1887; National
Academy in London, was well received, and so Gallery of Art, Washington). Although Monet
too were the works of Jongkind, Harpignies was later to deny that Sargent was an Impres-
and even Pissarro. sionist, this was unjust, especially in relation to
One cannot judge the Salon des Refuses some of his works in the 1880s and 1890s.
merely in terms of the good paintings in it; Indeed, Sargent's technique for painting large
there were there must have been many that canvases out of doors,as evinced in Carnation,
were execrable, no matter what style they Lily, Lily,Rose (1885-86; Tate Gallery, Lon-
displayed, and it is easy to understand what don), was to be of use to Monet in his larger
Castagnary meant when he wrote, 'Before the compositions. Sargent persuaded Monet to
Salon des Refuses we could not imagine what a exhibit at the New English Art Club (see
bad painting was. Today we know. We have England), and at the Leicester Galleries in
witnessed and seen it.' The official view was London. See also italy, james, usa [124]
later expressed in 1866 when, in replying to E. Charteris, John Sargent (1927); S. Olson,
Cezanne's request for another Salon des John Singer Sargent (1986)
Refuses, Nieuwerkerke wrote, 'What he asks is
impossible. We have already seen how unsuit- Scandinavia There were, in the first instance,
able the exhibition of the rejected was for the personalties between Scandinavia and the
dignity of art. It will not be re-established.' Impressionists, monet's stepson Jacques lived in
What the Salon des Refuses did do, however, Norway, and he himself arrived there in 1895,
was of a gulf between
to publicize the existence deep in the of winter, to paint its
heart
official, or academic, and 'modern' art, which landscape, though he had also made earlier visits
has persisted into the 20th c, to place Manet and in the 1880s when the elements were not so
his followers firmly in the latter group, and to hostile. During the later excursion he gave a
endow the Impressionists, once they became a lengthy interview at Sandviken to the young
more or less coherent group, with a reputation Norwegian poet Henri Bang, which was pub-
for stylistic anarchy that they had done little to lished in its entirety in the Bergens Tiede for 5
deserve. See also astruc, desnoyers, martinet April 1895. He also established contact with the
[183, 220} person who was to be mainly responsiblefor
A. Tabarant, La Vie artistique au temps de consolidating the reputation of the Impressio-
194
Scandinavia
Sargent's view of Monet painting at the edge of a wood (1888), a companion pieo to Manet's view of
him at work in his studio-boat, emphasizes Monet's taste for open-air painting.
nists in Scandinavia, Prince Eugen (1 865 1947), (1 858-1930), who had studied in Paris but who
a son of King Oscar II, and one of the most showed more of the influence of Bastien-
important Swedish painters of his generation. Lepage and corot than of the Impressionists
Eugen's own painting owed a great deal to the themselves. The same rather half-hearted
Impressionists, though he adumbrated it with a concern with the true nature of the Impressio-
mysterious quality, which seems at times to nistdiscovery was also shown in the work of the
suggest the influence of Odilon Redon. He artistic colonies the Swedes and Finns at
bought from Monet works for his own private Onningeby on Lemland, the largest of the
collection, as well as for the Swedish National Aland Islands, and the Norwegians on the farm
Gallery, and in 191 3 cassatt told durand-ruel of Erik Wrenskiold - which in the latter quarter
that he had paid 25,000 francs for a degas for the of the 19th c. became centres of contemporary
gallery at Stockholm. Scandinavian art.
The Scandinavians as a whole had a natural Edvard Munch (1 863-1944) had made his
affinity for landscape painting, even though first trip from Norway to Paris in 1885 and was
they were apt to overlay the purely descriptive impressed by the work of caillebotte, a friend
element with implications of deeper signifi- of his mentor Christian Keogh. On his return
cance. The reaction against the tradition of he was hailed by a fellow artist as 'the first and
academic painting which took place in most of only Impressionist of Norway', but it would
the Nordic countries in the late 1870s was seem that the word 'Impressionist' was being
initiated by artists such as the Swedes Karl used loosely, as indeed it often was, merely to
Frederick Hill (1849-1911) and Nils Kreuger indicate general avant-garde tendencies. In any
195
Scandinavia
Kreuger, Old Country House, 1887: the brushwork reveals the extent to which the techniques of
Impressionism influenced painters from Scandinavia.
196
Sculpture
197
Sculpture
producing sculpture. Albert bartholome, him- more complex and ingenious subject, The Tub,
self a sculptor who helped the painter greatly in which showed a young woman examining her
this medium, remembered him having pro- foot, in a shallow bath tub of the kind that
duced a bas-relief of girls picking apples before appears in several pastels of the period. A final
1870, and in a letter to a friend written on his figure of the period, impossible to pinpoint to a
first Italian trip, Degas wrote 'I often wonder specific year, was again in the same roughly
whether I shall become a painter or a sculptor. I 'expressionist' style of the Harlequin, showing a
must confess the problem bothers me.' ballet-dancer with her right leg extended in
By about 1869 he had started to produce front of her, and her arms en attitude.
models of horses in wax, which were cast in Other studies of ballet-dancers, bathers and
bronze after his death by A. A. Hebrard (Metro- horses accumulated in Degas' studio, but he was
politan Museum, New York, and Musee d'Or- very reluctant to have them cast, finding in the
Sculpture
199
Seurat, Georges
including delacroix, Rodin, cezanne and Medardo Rosso (1858 1928) was in a
Ingres, which were executed 1916 17. position analagous to that of Rodin as a
In several of these sculptures there is more sculptural 'Impressionist'. Their styles were in
than a hint of the influence of Maillol, due, in fact very similar, and Rosso always claimed
part at least, to the role played by Guino. that the compositional idea of the latter's Balzac
Inevitably, therefore, the question arises as to was derived from his own works, such as The
whether there was a sculptural equivalent to Bookmaker (1894; Museum of Modern Art,
Impressionism. If one accepts the narrow mean- New York). Although Italian by birth, Rosso
ing of the word (see also music) it seems spent much of his time in Paris, and was friendly
impossible, but then in common usage the with Degas, zola and the collector rouart. His
word is seldom used in so restricted a sense. In its creative career virtually ended when he was 41.
wider connotation, as implying (at the time) See also astruc [70, g8, 188]
something 'modern' that gave an impression of V. Belrose-Huyghues, impressionnisme en
a visual experience rather than a literal descrip- Sculpture', in Connaissance des arts (Jan. 1974);
tion, it has come to be applied to the work of H.W. Janson, Nineteenth-Century Sculpture
sculptors such as Jules Dalou (1 838-1902), (1985); Degas, Grand Palais, Paris, exhibition
whose Fraternity, a bas-relief on the mairie of the catalogue (1988)
10th arrondissement, presents such a contrast to
so much contemporary urban neo-classicism, Seurat, Georges (1859-91) A Parisian of solid
and of course to the work of Rodin, who shared middle-class background, Seurat entered the
an exhibition at Georges petit's with monet. To ecole des beaux-arts when quite young, but
many of his contemporaries Rodin's statue of was not happy there, although he absorbed its
Balzac must have seemed as disturbing as discipline of drawing. He spent much time
manet's Dejeuner sur Vherbe had been some 30 studying in the Louvre and, from the very
years earlier. beginning, showed a thoughtfulness and a
Seurat's Pointillist masterpiece, Sunday Afternoon on the Island of La Grande J atte, 1884-86, created a
200
Sickert, Walter Richard
Cartesian passion for analysis, which led him to century, giving special encouragement through
createfrom within Impressionist visual empiri- his works and ideas to Cubism and to painters
cism a new system thatwould supplant it, and such as Leger, whereas the traditions of Impres-
act as a catalyst for a whole spectrum of 20th-c. sionism were transmitted to Expressionism and
art. He claimed that ever since the age of 1 6 he its derivatives. See also blanc, emperaire,
had been searching for a method of rationaliz- GAUGUIN, LUCIEN PISSARRO, LA VIE MODERNE
ing colours to create form, and he became J. Rewald, Seurat (1948); J. Rewald, Post-
deeply immersed in the theories of chevreul Impressionism (1956)
and other scientists on the simultaneous con-
trasts of colour, the effects of juxtaposed Shchukin, Sergei 851 1936) came from a
(1
colours, and the fact that each colour can dynasty of Moscowtraders; all four of his
impose its own complementary on its' brothers were assiduous art collectors, but none
neighbour. more adventurous or more enthusiastic than he.
These ideas first found expression in Bathing He did not, however, start collecting on a large
at Lon-
Asnieres (1883-84; National Gallery, scale until after the death of his father in 1890,
don), which he exhibited at the Salon des when he became head of the Shchukin Trading
independants, of which he was one of the first House and bought a princely residence, which
members, and through which he came to know he proceeded to stack with French paintings. In
signac, who did so much to promulgate his 1897 Fiodor Botkin, one of his mother's
theories. His next major work, Sunday After- relatives, drew his attention to monet, and he
noon on the Island of La Grande fatte (1886; Art bought from durand-ruel Lilac in the Sun, the
Institute of Chicago), which measures first Impressionist painting to reach Moscow.
206 x 259 cms (81 x 102 ins.), created a sensa- He continued to buy Monets extensively up to
tion when it was shown at the last Impressionist about 1906. He relied heavily on Durand-Ruel
exhibition of 1886, along with six seascapes. and had a special gallery built for his collection
pissarro was immediately impressed, writing of renoirs. He also collected pissarro and
to his son Lucien, 'Seurat has something new to cezanne, and had a superb collection of pastels
contribute, which these gentlemen (his fellow by degas. Later he went on to acquire works by
exhibitors), despite their talent, are not able to gauguin, Picasso and especially Matisse. Most
appreciate. I am totally convinced of the of his collection is now in the Hermitage,
progressive nature of his art, and certain that in Leningrad, or the Pushkin Museum, Moscow.
time it will yield extraordinary results. ... I do See alsomorosov
not accept the snobbish judgments of "roman- M. Ginsburg, 'Art Collectors of Old Russia',
tic" Impressionists in whose interest it is to fight Apollo (Dec. 1973); M. Bessonova (ed.), Impres-
against new tendencies. I accept the challenge, sionist and Post-Impressionist Paintings in Soviet
that's all.' He did, in fact, 'accept the challenge' Museums (1985)
and for a period painted in what was coming to
be known as the Pointillist style. Sickert, Walter Richard (i860 1942) Born
The other Impressionists had been extremely in Munich of mixed English and Danish
reluctant to accept Seurat's work, and even- was the outstanding example of
descent, Sickert
tually his paintings, together with works of an on the fringes of Impressionism,
artist
Signac, Pissarro himself and his son Lucien, friendly with many of its leading practitioners
were shown together in a separate room. Both while yet remaining an individualist, taking
factions were right in their own ways. Seurat from the movement those technical devices and
represented an entirely different attitude, closer, attitudes that were best attuned to his own
interms of the old dichotomy, to Ingres than to creative personality. Commencing his career as
Delacroix, and he was, by implication, assail- an actor, he soon found that painting was his
ing the 'softness' of Impressionism in very real metier. He became a student at the Slade
much the same way that cezanne was. School of Art, under Alphonse legros, who
Seurat died of an infection at the age of 32 was close to the Impressionists, and then
and so was not able fully to realize the worked in whistler's studio.
implications of his revolution and the effects it In 1883 Sickert went to Paris, where he
would have. Nevertheless, he became the became intimate with degas, deriving from his
precursor of all 'hard-edge' painting that work an interest in the depiction of contempor-
occurred throughout most of the following ary urban life that was to remain one of the
Signac, Paul
Signac, Paul (1863-193 5) His well-to-do par- Signac, The Seine, Grenelle, 1899: an industrial
ents had originally intended him to be an landscape in Pointillist technique.
202
Sisley, Alfred
a theory that has informed much artistic discussion, not of bewilderment'. His
but
thinking ever since. In 1927 he published an general judgment of the group as a whole is
important book on jongkind (a painter whom 'that the success of these newcomers is that their
Monet had greatly admired and learnt from), pictures are painted according to a singularly
and his article on 'Les Besoins individuels et cheerful tonality. A blond light illumines them,
lapeinture' for the 1935 Encyclopedic francaise and everything in them is gaiety, clarity and
was a remarkable piece of imaginative joyfulness.' On the other hand, in a review
interpretation. published in the same year, Silvestre com-
of concep-
Inferior to Seurat in magnificence plained that the Impressionists' insistence on
tion and in the ability to handle complicated painting any kind of landscape, rather than
compositions, he produced a great number of selecting an obviously beautiful one was 'an
eminently pleasing and even impressive paint- awkward affectation, based on the concept that
ings, though his style and technique showed everything in nature is of equal beauty, an
little or no development. See also chevreul, artistically erroneous idea'. See also critics
volume Receuil d'estampes in 1873, which was to By this time, however, he had started to
contain 300 reproductions of works from his frequent the cafe guerbois, and was becoming
own stock, including examples of works by more deeply influenced by the notions which
Manet, monet, pissarro, sisley and Degas, he were creating Impressionism. During the
commissioned Silvestre to write the introduc- franco-prussian war and the period of the
tion, a tribute to the percipience that the latter Commune, he spent some time in London and
had shown in his general criticism of the was introduced to durand-ruel by pissarro,
Impressionists. His judgments may be faulted, becoming part of that dealer's stable. In the
but they did present the general public with an mean time, his father had lost all his money as a
appropriate framework into which individual result of the war, and Sisley, with a family to
artists could be fitted: 'Monet, the most adept support, was reduced to a state of penury, in
and daring'; Sisley, 'the most harmonious and which he was to stay until virtually the end of
hesitant'; Pissarro, 'the most genuine and his life.
203
"
Social background
i
S^
V N
'
k y
*-iIi-
1 i
Tf-iMI
^iSfe 1
*
Sisley, Vue de Montmartre prise de la Cite des Fleurs, 1869. An early landscape showing the influence of
Courbet and Corot.
He now saw himself as a full-time pro- approaching the recognition he deserved. See
fessional painterand part of the Impressionist also DRAWING, ENGLAND, FAURE, MOROSOV.
group, exhibiting with them in 1874, 1876, P1EIN-AIRISME, PRICES, PRINTS, SOCIAL BACK-
1877 and 1882. His work had by this time GROUND [37, 36, 82 ]
achieved complete independence from the Venturi (1939); F. Daulte, Alfred Sisley (1959);
early influences that had affected him. In the J. Leymane and M. Melot, Les Gravures des
1870s he produced a remarkable series of impressionnistes (1971)
landscapes of argenteuil, where he was living,
one of which, The Bridge at Argenteuil (1872; Social background It is generally accepted
Brooks Memorial Gallery, Memphis, USA) that the French Revolution transferred real
was bought by manet. Towards the end of the political power to the bourgeoisie, and that this
decade Monet was beginning to have a con- transfer was confirmed by the suppression of
siderable influence on him, and a series of the Commune after the fall of the Empire (see
landscape paintings of the area around Paris, France, politics). But this is clearly an over-
including Marly, bougival and louveciennes simplification. The growth of industrialization
(1876; Floods at Port-Marly, Musee d'Orsay), and all that went with it was enlarging the
shows the way in w hich
7
dominant and
his bourgeoisie both in size and in wealth, a
evident lyricism still respects the demands of the phenomenon which was docu-
so convincingly
subject-matter. From his early admiration for mented in the novels of zola. The advent of the
Corot he retained a passionate interest in the Third Republic after 1870, however, was
sky, which nearly always dominates his paint- characterized by the emergence of a powerful
ings, and also in the effects of snow, the two 'middle' as opposed to a 'grand' bourgeoisie,
interests often combining to create a strangely and its members became the most characteristic
dramatic effect (Snow at Veneux, 1880; Musee representatives of the period. It was from their
d'Orsay). Naturally diffident, he did not pro- ranks that most of the Impressionists were
mote himself in the way that some of his fellow drawn, and Impressionism was very largely
Impressionists did, and was only towards the
it concerned with their life and its background.
end of his life, when he was dying of cancer of manet came from a family of magistrates;
the throat, that he received something morisoi was the daughter of a monarchist
04
Societe Anonyme des Artistes
Bazille's painting of his family on the terrace of their home near Montpellier in 1867 reflects the
leisured life of the bourgeoisie, which formed the social background of most of the Impressionists.
high-ranking civil servant; degas came from a Societe Anonyme des Artistes It is import-
banking family of aristocratic origins; sisley's ant in the first instance to realize that the phrase
father was a rich English businessman; cassatt's 'societe anonyme' cannot be translated literally;
was a wealthy railway magnate, bazille's a it is the French equivalent of 'limited company'.
prosperous vineyard owner. Cezanne's father In 1873, largely as a consequence of the
had started offas a hatter but, by lending money economic depression that hit France around this
to the farmers from whom he bought the skins time, and which forced durand-ruel to stop
then used in his trade, made himself into the buying any more paintings, monet, pissarro
most important banker in aix-en-provence. and others decided that it would be worth while
pissarro came from a wealthy West Indies trying to sell their paintings at a group exhibi-
family, which eventually settled in Paris, cail- tion, consisting of those who formed the so-
lebotte's family was typical of the very affluent called batignolles group and others connected
bourgeois of the Second Empire; extremely with them. Much
of the drive towards the
wealthy textile manufacturers who had moved exhibition Pissarro, who was almost
came from
to Paris from Normandy, they took a stake in obsessively concerned with administration and
the development of the French capital that organizational details. He himself, in i860, had
happened under napoleon hi, and further joined the Association des artistes peintres
increased their riches. d'histoire et de genre, sculpteurs, graveurs,
Renoir and monet were the only exceptions: architectes et dessinateurs, which had been
Renoir's father was a tailor who, like many of founded 16 years earlier as a kind of provident
the inhabitants of Paris at the time, had society, offering help and pensions to its
migrated to the capital from the provinces, members. This formed one of the prototypes
while Monet's father adopted the reverse pro- for the association of artists he had in mind to
cedure and left Paris in 1845 to work in his arrange exhibitions and indulge in other
brother's wholesale grocery business in Le mutually beneficial activities. Another even
Havre. In their subsequent careers neither artist more bizarre precedent he advanced was that of
showed the least sign of their 'humble' begin- the bakers' union, which he had studied in
nings. See also paris, patrons pontoise, and which harmonized with his own
Rewald (1973); Zeldin (1988) political views. However, renoir and others
205
Societe des Artistes Independants
each member paying one-tenth of the income including legros, but its function was at of best
from sales organized by the company, with the a lightly advisory kind. Quite apart from
running costs being covered by subscriptions. anything else,Durand-Ruel included in the
The agreement to found this 'societe ano- exhibitions works by English artists, such as
nyme' was signed on 27 December 1873. Mark Fisher, Burne-Jones, Alma Tadema (and
Amongst the original members were Monet, his wife) and Wilkie.
Renoir, sisley, degas, morisot, pissarro, The majority of the artists represented were
beliard, guillaumin, and Degas' friends lepic, of the kind in which his Parisian gallery
Levert and rouart. Having secured the studios specialized, reaching as far back as Ingres and
recently vacated by nadar and started to Delacroix, but including predominantly
arrange their first exhibition, they had to find a courbet, Isabey, corot, boudin, jongkind,
name and it is significant, in
for themselves, Harpigmes and fantin-latour, whose works
view of the of what came to be
later history were bought in England by such collectors as
known as 'Impressionism', that there was Louis Huth, Constantine Ionides and John W.
considerable opposition to any title with stylis- Wilson. But he also included in every exhibi-
tic connotations. This was led by Degas, who tion except the second (1871), works by the
suggested that they should call themselves ia Impressionists, monet and pissarro were the
Capucine' which means nasturtium - and first, then in 1872 came manet, degas, sisley
adopt the flower as their emblem. Eventually and renoir. In 1874 morisot and gonzales
206
Spain
appeared. Manet's representation in these exhi- again to the English scene in 1883 he no longer
bitionswas the most formidable, and his works employed the 'Society of French Artists' as a
were priced the highest, 400 guineas being front for his commercial activities.
asked for works such as The Spanish Singer Venturi (1939); Cooper (1954)
(i860; Metropolitan Museum, New York) and
Dead Christ with Angels (1864; Metropolitan Sommier, Francois-Clement (Henri
Museum, New York). Pissarro's Upper Nor- Somm) ( 1 844-1907) Born in Rouen, he
wood (1871; Courtauld Institute, London), quickly built up in Paris a reputation as an
however, was priced at only 25 guineas, and the illustrator, caricaturist and designer, his work
same kind of amounts were charged for appearing in fashionable journals such as Le
Monet's works, as well as those of Sisley. Degas Monde parisien and Tout-Paris. In 1879 he
occupied a median position, his Robert le Diable submitted two prints and a group of book
(1872; Metropolitan Museum, New York) illustrations to the1879 impressionist exhibi-
being priced at 100 guineas, and eventually tion. He was deeply influenced by Japanese art,
being bought in Paris by faure for 1500 francs. and was a close friend of Felix bracquemond.
Although the exhibitions exposed the E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs,
Impressionists to the English public for the first dessinateurs et graveurs (1966)
time, they do not seem to have secured any
immediate sales,and having closed his London Spain Nineteenth-century France was hypno-
gallery in 1875, when Durand-Ruel returned tizedby Spain, a fact documented in the
Spain: Goya's Executions of 3 May 1808, painted six years after the event, shares many similarities with
Manet's Execution of the Emperor Maximilian, 1867, an equally political work.
207
Spain
208
Stevens, Alfred
nal Gallery of Art, Washington, D.C.), in able authenticity. There does not seem to have
which there are also echoes of Murillo; in a kind been any considerable market for the works of
of visual seriousness, and in the dramatic the Impressionists in Spain, and the influence of
manipulation of black. More problematic are the movement on Spanish painting was so late
technical influences, such as brushwork, where and so diffused as barely to merit attention. See
some apparent similarities might be more also ANTECEDENTS [20, 105, l$g, 21 3 J
convincingly attributed to the influence of F. Jimenez-Placer, La Pintura espanola en la
Frans Hals, with whose works Manet had a epoca del realismo y del impresionismo (1944); J.
closer first-hand experience through his visits to Isaacson, Manet and Spain, Art Museum,
Holland. But as late as 1881, when he painted University of Michigan, exhibition catalogue
The Bar at the Folies-Bergere (Courtauld Insti- (1969); Le Musee espagnol de Louis-Philippe,
tute, London), he was still remembering Velaz- Louvre, exhibition catalogue (198 1)
quez's interplay of the viewpoints of spectator
and implied spectator, to be found in Las Stevens, Alfred (1 823-1906) A Belgian artist,
Meninas (1660; Prado, Madrid). The influence who lived and worked in Paris for most of his
of Goya was also apparent in The Execution of life, he became immensely popular as a society
the Emperor Maximilian (Museum of Fine Arts, portraitist, and was one of the first living artists
Boston, and National Gallery, London) and in to be accorded an exhibition at the ecole des
The Balcony (1869; Musee d'Orsay, based on beaux-arts. He was a great friend of manet,
the Majas on the Balcony, a version of which he and it was in Stevens' studio that he first met
saw in 1867. bazille. Especially towards the latter part of his
In 1862 Manet found degas in the Louvre, career he was much influenced by the Impres-
making an etching directly onto copper of the sionists, adopting a loose style of brushwork
portrait of the Infanta Marguerita by Velaz- analogous to that of sargent. With his friend
quez. He was greatly impressed by the skill and bracquemond, he was one of the first devotees
ingenuity that Degas was displaying in the task.
On the whole, however, it was to Goya rather
than to the earlier artist that Degas looked.
Several of his group portraits show the frontal
simplicity of composition that marked Goya's
The Family of Charles IV, and the year after the
encounter with Manet, Degas bought the
newly published edition of The Disasters of
War. Time and time again, contemporary
critics likened his pictures of prostitutes and
working women to the works of the Spaniard,
and portraits such as Woman with the Umbrella
(National Gallery of Canada, Ottawa) show
more formal influences.
Cezanne, on the other hand, was more
impressed by the dramatic effects of Zurbaran
and Ribera, the influence of the latter being
especially apparent in the sombre Preparation
for the Funeral (1868; Private collection); it is
209
Stevenson, R.A.M.
of Japanese art, elements of which he intro- Impressionism was all about. He also greatly
duced as bric-a-brac into his society paintings encouraged the work of those English and
(The Visit, 1876; Sterling and Francine Clark Scottish artists who adopted Impressionist tech-
Art Institute, Williamstown, Mass.). His book, niques and approaches. See also critics
Impressions sur lapeinture (1886), was a consider- Dictionary of National Biography, supplement
able success. His brother Joseph was a critic and iii (1914); Cooper (1954); Flint (1984)
animal painter who did quite a lot to help the
Impressionists. See also cafes, critics, meurent Stora, Clementine
(1 845-1917) A well-
G. van Zype, Les Freres Stevens (1936) known and the wife of a dealer in
hostess,
antiques and Middle Eastern wares, whose shop
Stevenson, R.A.M. (1 847-1900) Painter and in the boulevard des Italiens was very popular
who, along with d.s. maccoll, helped
art critic amongst those who favoured the current taste
explain Impressionism to the English public. A for exotic bric-a-brac, renoir painted a portrait
cousin of Robert Louis Stevenson, after gra- of her dressed in Algerian costume (Fine Arts
duating at Cambridge he studied art in Edin- Museum, San Francisco), which was exhibited
burgh, Paris and Antwerp, became Professor of at the 1870 salon and which formed part of a
Fine Art at University College, Liverpool, sequence of similar works he was painting at
from 1 880 to 1 893 and was, for the last ten years this period, all showing the very clear influence
of his life, art critic of the Pall Mall Gazette. His of delacroix. The painting was acquired by
major work was The Art of Velazquez, pub- monet in 1906.
lished in 1895, the first intelligent appreciation Renoir, Hayward Gallery, London, exhibi-
of that artist to appear in England; and it was tion catalogue (1985)
his concern with this artist, who had so much
influenced manet and others, that led him
to a sympathetic understanding of what
T
Tanguy, Julien (Pere Tanguy) (1825-94) A
colour merchant, originally of the peripatetic
variety, Tanguy first came into contact with the
vitalelements in I9th-c. painting in 1870, in the
forestof Fontainebleau, where he met renoir,
pissarro and monet. A republican radical in
politics, he fought on the side of the Commu-
nards, was captured by the troops of Thiers and
deported to Brest, but was released through the
intervention of rouart. He then opened a shop
in the rue Clauzel in montmartre. Friendly and
intelligent, he was ready to exchange artists'
materials for paintings and drawings by his
friends, and they saw in his efforts to promote
their works an artistic expression of his natural
revolutionary instincts. Introduced to cezanne
by Pissarro, his shop became a virtual gallery
for the painter from Aix, and it was there that
Renoir took chocquet to persuade him of
Cezanne's neglected talents. It is interesting to
note that as late as 1885 Cezanne owed Tanguy
401 5 francs 40 centimes, and Tanguy had to beg
Van Gogh's portrait of Pere Tanguy, the colour the painter to repay him as he was facing
merchant, surrounded by Japanese prints, 1887 8 eviction.
210
Technique
(1985); J. Rewald, Studies in Post-Impressionism juxtaposition on the canvas, and the realization
(1986) that pigment applied in varying degrees of
thickness could catch and reflect light, giving
Technique The techniques of Impressionism the finished work an impression of brightness
from artist to
inevitably varied a great deal and vivacity.
artist, and from period to period. It clearly Such an approach to the manipulation of
requires a great deal of economizing with the paint was not entirely new. Renoir, especially
truth to find much common technical ground in his early days, had been greatly impressed by
between, say, degas' Bouderie of 1869 (Metro- the fluent brushstrokes and dynamism of some
politan Museum, New York) and renoir's The of courbet's works, but by the 1870s he and
Promenade (National Gallery of Scotland) of the Monet had become converted to a much
same year, or between manet's Olympia of 1863 smaller brushstroke, creating in their painting a
(Musee d'Orsay) and his portrait of monet pattern of dots and dashes, which could be
working in his studio boat, painted 11 years manipulated colour and opacity to create an
in
later (Bayerische Staatsgemaldesammlungen, overall image of persuasive coherence. In the
Munich). period between 1876 and 1878 Monet was
There were, however, certain changes that selling to his colleagues, as well as to dealers,
the Impressionists jointly brought about in the works that were in actual fact mere pochades
nature of painting and its objectives, which to the detriment of his reputation at the time; in
depended on technical devices, including their the1 880s, however, he started to apply a greater
use of colour and perspective, as well as their degree of finish to his paintings, working up the
actual manipulation of the paint surface. It was out-of-door sketches in the studio with more
this latter quality which most antagonized their elaborate forms of brushwork and a greater
critics, who saw in their works a lack of 'finish', integration of colour.
a 'roughness', and a general lack of skill, which There was, throughout the compara-
in fact,
they attributed to technical incompetence tively short history of the movement a growing
rather than deliberate intention. reaction against the ideal of technical sponta-
Two of the most cherished ideals of the neity. It was to find ultimate expression in the
Impressionists determined the nature of their Pointillism of seurat, and in pissarro's tem-
brushwork. The first was the idea of plein- porary conversion to it, no less than in the
airisme, of working out-of-doors in direct works Renoir was producing in the 1880s,
contact with nature. This had not been un- marked as they were by smoother brushwork
known amongst the artists of the academic and harder outlines, which seemed at times
tradition, but they had used it merely to almost to look back to Ingres. The reaction
produce pochades, or sketches, which were later against the loose techniques of the earlier period
worked up into finished paintings. The Impres- could be seen as a consequence of ageing. But it
sionists, however, placing emphasis on the was due, at least in part, to pressures from both
notion of spontaneity, saw in this approach an dealers and even friendly critics, durand-ruel
honesty and directness of expression that were had for long been complaining about the
central to their beliefs. Closely connected with Impressionists' lack of finish, and in 1880 Zola
this was a concern with catching the fleeting had commented tartly 'M. Monet has given in
moment, the precise time at which changing too much to his facility of production. When
light and atmosphere influenced the actual one is too easily satisfied, when one delivers
appearance of a place, a person, or an object. To sketches that are scarcely dry, one loses the taste
achieve such instantaneous imagery, the slow, for works that have been worked on for a long
Thore, Theophile
which the latter had given him. At one point Trehot, she was born in Paris of a humble
they seemed to have a reciprocal influence on family that had moved there from the country.
each other's style, and Degas was reputedly She soon established herself on terms of inti-
jealous of Tissot's success. In the Metropolitan macy with both Renoir and sisley, who gave
Museum, New York, there is a portrait of her one of his paintings. She first appeared
Tissotby Degas (1868). He was also friendly prominently in Renoir's Diana (1867; National
with manet, and remained so until the latter's Gallery of Art, Washington), and in 1868 was
death. the sitter for a work sometimes known as The
Trouville
1959)
213
L'Union
u The
bited in
first Impressionist painting to be exhi-
America was manet's Execution of the
Emperor Maximilian (1868; Kunsthalle, Mann-
heim), which, for political reasons, Manet had
not been allowed to show in Paris. This was
L'Union In August 1875 pissarro, with his brought to New York and Boston by Emilie
passion for organization, conceived the idea, ambre, a singer, and exhibited in the one city at
together with his friend Alfred Meyer, of the Clarendon Hotel on the corner of 8th Street
founding a group called L'Union to succeed the and Broadway, in the other at the Studio
SOCIETE ANONYME etc., which the
DES ARTISTES Building Gallery. Despite the fact that the
Impressionists had formed as a joint stock subject was of historical interest, and that the
company' in 1873, and which had been dis- exhibition was advertised by a poster which
solved in the following year. Meyer became the proclaimed 'Come in! Come in and see the
secretary and was soon being accused of plot- famous picture of the famous painter Ed
ting against the original Impressionists - Manet', there was little enthusiasm, even
especiallymonet. cezanne refused to exhibit though the press was not overtly hostile.
with the new
group. The company, for that In 1883, however, a so-called 'International
was the financial form it assumed, was incor- Exhibition for Art and Industry' was held in the
porated on 1 8 August 1 875, with Pissarro as one Mechanics' Building in Boston, which was
of the board of directors. declared a bonded warehouse, thus exempting
In 1877, to forestall the Impressionists' own exhibits from customs duty. A number of
exhibition, due to open in April, Meyer staged Impressionist paintings were exhibited: 2 by
one by the members of the Union at the Grand Manet, 3 by monet, 6 by pissarro, 3 by renoir
Hotel on the boulevard des Capucines, and on and 3 by sisley, as well as works by boudin,
24 February guillaumin wrote to dr gachet, courbet and corot. It is assumed that these
'You know that the exhibition of the Union has were sent by durand-ruel, though this is not
opened at the Grand Hotel. We were supposed certain. A drawing after Manet's Dead Christ
to be in it, Pissarro, Cezanne and me, but at the with Angels (1864; Metropolitan Museum, New
last minute we resigned.' Cezanne had indeed York) appeared as a frontispiece to the cata-
written to Pissarro the previous summer logue, and was the first work of the school to be
expressing distrust of Meyer and adding, 'First, reproduced in America. Also in 1883, an
too many exhibitions one after another seem to exhibition was arranged at the National Acad-
me a bad thing, and second, people who think emy of Design, to help secure funds for the
that they are going to see Impressionists see pedestal for the Statue of Liberty, largely under
nothing but co-operatives.' The critics in fact the direction of William Merrit Chase. Many
paid no attention to the Union and it faded into Impressionist paintings were included, and
oblivion. See also latouche Manet was given the position of honour. Then
P. Gachet, Lettres impressionnistes au Dr Gachet in 1885 the American Art Association
et a Murer (1957); Rewald (1973); Rewald approached Durand-Ruel, asking him to
(1985) arrange an exhibition of the Impressionists in
New York. This opened on 10 April 1886, and
USA The first contact between the Impressio- included 23 works by Degas, 17 by Manet, 48
nistsand the United States was on the occasion by Monet, 42 by Pissarro, 38 by Renoir, 3 by
of degas' visit to New Orleans in 1872, amply seurat, 5 by Cassatt, 6 by caillebotte and 15
documented in his correspondence, and finding by Sisley. Press reaction was varied, but much
itsmost impressive monument in Cotton Office, less hostile than it had been in Paris or London.
New Orleans (Musee Municipal, Pau). Close About 20 per cent of the works exhibited were
contacts with America grew up in Paris, due sold.
very largely to people such as Mary cassatt of Some of the paintings in the exhibition were
Pittsburgh, who arrived there in 1868, settling from American sources, and a considerable
lent
permanently in 1874, and the American painter body of collectors had by now started to show
Theodore robinson, who was most active in interest in the work of the Impressionists. These
promoting the works of the Impressionists both included - in addition to the havemeyers -
amongst American expatriates and in the USA Albert Spencer, who sold his collection of older
itself. paintings in 1888 to concentrate on the Impres-
214
USA
Manet's Execution of the Emperor Maximilian (1867), the first Impressionist painting to be exhibited in the
USA, was brought from Paris by Emilie Ambre.
sionists; Desmond Fitzgerald (1846 1928), who nists were not included in the official French
wrote the introduction to an exhibition of section, but a privately arranged Loan Collec-
works by Monet, Pissarro and Sisley held in tion of Foreign Masters owned in the United
New York in 1891, and was instrumental in States presented 18 pictures by Degas, Manet,
arranging the loan exhibition of Monet held by Monet, Pissarro and Sisley. The exhibition had
the Copley Society of Boston in 1905; James S. been largely arranged by Mrs Berthe Honore
Inglis, who headed the New York art dealers Palmer, who had been an early collector of
Cottier and Co. and was the owner of Manet's Impressionist paintings, most of which are now
Bullfight (1867; Art Institute, Chicago) and in the Art Institute of Chicago. By the 1890s
Dead Toreador (1863; National Gallery, Wash- Impressionism had become firmly established
ington); and William H. Fuller, who arranged a as an influence amongst painters and this led to a
one-man exhibition for Monet - by far the greater interest amongst collectors generally.
most popular of the Impressionists in America A good deal of their success was due to
and sold many of his works directly to Ameri- various publications, such as Scribner's, Modem
can collectors. Durand-Ruel, in collaboration Art, the Art Amateur and others, which gave the
with James F. Sutton of the American Art Impressionists a good deal of publicity, most of
Association, held another exhibition in May it objective, if not positively favourable.
1887, but because of complications concerning Personal contacts also played an important role.
customsduties, no pictures were sold. At the Cassatt was very active in promoting the works
Columbian Exposition of 1893, tne Impressio- by her friendsand colleagues amongst a circle
215
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Concerned by the lack of
structure apparent in the
Impressionists' technique,
Cezanne sought to recapture a
more classical sense of balance
-
in his own words, 'to re-do
Poussin from nature' . In his
Still Life with Onions and
Bottle (i8g$-igoo) he creates
a composition of great
permanence and solidity by
building up a complex web of
visual relationships. The broad,
bare wall provides a foil to the
closely packed forms and faceted
colour blocking of the
foreground, where a series of
rhythmic curves and tilting axes
are echoed in the scalloped
curves of the table, the bottle,
the glass, and the twisting
onion leaves. As part of the
continuing search for a means
of producing an accurate record
of reality, Cezanne aimed to
his late works Renoir reduced his palette as far as the blouse and cheeks against the pure black of the hair
possible in order to obtain greater control over his and eyes. The vigorous handling of the blouse and
materials, and to exploit the richest possible effects from flowers contrasts with the fine web of separate, blended
the simplest possible means. Gabrielle with Roses strokes, which introduce subtle variations of red and
( 1911 ) is constructed from a series of clear colour white, and animate the soft flesh - always a source of
contrasts united by a pattern of equally weighted accents: fascination for Renoir, who employed Gabrielle largely
the warm red of the roses, lips and table against the because 'her skin took the light well'.
It was Manet's technique as much as the subject-matter series of half-tones from dark to light. His massing of
of Dejeuner sur l'herbe that so outraged visitors to the light and dark areas, reminiscent of studio photography,
Salon des Refuses in 1863. His use offrontal lighting, and the freedom of his handling must have seemed crude
which eliminates shadows, allowed him to dispense with by comparison with the subtle chiaroscuro and tightly
the painstaking academic procedure of building up a worked surfaces of contemporary Salon paintings.
Degas' relationship with Impressionism, like that of The influence of another Impressionist enthusiasm -
Manet, is highly problematic. His traditional training photography - is also clearly reflected in the unfocused
had imbued him with an Ingresque sense oj line and grouping of the figures and in the way the man on the
with an enduring faith in the value of preparatory right is cut through by the picture frame; it is as if a
studies: 'There is nothing less spontaneous than my art'. single, passing moment has been captured in a snap-
Unlike his fellow contributors to the Impressionist shot. Yet the apparently arbitrary arrangement conceals
exhibitions, his paint was often thinly and smoothly a precisely constructed composition. The repeated
applied , his forms were more clearly modelled, his verticalsof the window frames and shelving balance the
contours more sharply defined, and his compositions almost frieze-like disposition oj heads across an above-
more tightly structured; colour was by no means his centre horizontal. This rigid grid is then crossed by the
main concern, and he continued to use earth colours and powerful diagonal of the steeply rising floor, repeated
black. What does connect him with the avant-garde of in the cotton table, the arms of the foreground chair and
the age is his lore oj contemporary subjects and his the stretched-out legs of the man reading the newspaper.
experimental, anti-academic approach to composition. A secondary, opposing diagonal is set up by the tilted
members of the American branch of the De Gas family. The complex geometrical framework , the linearity of
By presenting his 'sitters' in their familiar everyday the image, and the subdued, limited colour range mark
surroundings, in their characteristic clothes and poses, the gulf between Degas and, say, Monet or Renoir; but
Degas, like many of the Impressionists, sought to like his fellow Impressionists Degas was seeking, in the
revitalize the stiff and rather staid conventions of Salon manner best suited to his own taste and temperament, to
portraiture, conveying more fully the entire personality provide a convincing response to Baudelaire's call for a
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In Racehorses in Front of the Stands (c. 1869-72) The power of the image lies in the visual tension
Degas shows Parisians taking the air at the newly between this Japanese-inspired flatness of design and the
opened racecourse at Longchamp in the Bois de traditional Western perspective construction, which
Boulogne. The complex forms of the horse provided a simultaneously creates a convincing illusion of depth.
supreme challenge to Degas' skills of draughtsmanship The sharply drawn diagonals seem to lead the eye to
and proved an enduring source of inspiration from his some significant pictorial climax, but the bolting horse,
early studies ofUccello, Gozzoli and Gericault, to his the distractedgazes of the jockeys and the random
fascination with the photographic experiments of directionsof the horses provide centripetal forces which
Eadweard Muybridge , first published in 1878, and counteract the implied focus of the image. This would
his own sculptures of leaping horses. have been considered heresy by upholders of the
Japanese art, with its and two-
emphasis on line rational, classical approach to composition still
dimensional design, particularly appealed to Degas' favoured in academic circles.
artistic sensibilities, and - combined with the possible In many ways the thoroughbred racehorses of
influence of English sporting prints, which were popular Longchamp express Degas' attitude to his art:
in France at the time - it seems to have set the stylistic concealing in their elegant motion the strain and effort
tone for this painting. The clearly outlined areas of of months of training, they mirror the painter's reliance
bright colour, unmodulated by light or atmosphere; the on careful preparation and past experience as he clears
decorative patterns of the horses' legs; the broadly with apparent ease the series of pictorial hurdles he has
painted flatness of the ground and sky, contrasted with devised for himself.
the detailed depiction of the crowd; the cropping of the
slanting shadows and of the horse on the right: all these
are typical Japanese devices.
References to Japanese art occur in many of Manet's similarities only serve to point up the change in
paintings in the background to his portrait of Zola, Manet's technique. The painting reveals him at his most
for example, and here, in the portrait of Nina de 'Impressionistic' the harsh frontal lighting and 'playing
:
Callias, known as Woman with Fans (1873-74). It is card' forms of the earlier work are softened by a golden
not the actual style ofJapanese art that is borrowed light, accented by scattered splashes of pure red, white
here, so much as the atmosphere
of domestic intimacy and turquoise. The lightening of Manet's palette and the
found in many Japanese prints, and the use of increasing freedom of his brushwork clearly reveal the
Japonaiserie to evoke an aura of exoticism. The fans influence of Impressionism, but he nevertheless
form a decorative and richly coloured backdrop to the maintains his faith in expressive contour and makes
figure , their varied axes balancing the tilt of the striking use of intense black. The vibrant, broken
woman's head and echoing the sweeping curves of her brushmarks create an of lively movement around
effect
dress and shawl. The feathers in her hair link her with the steady gaze of the sitter, which directly engages the
the plumage of the crane in the wallpaper implying a , attention of the spectator. This was one of Manet's
pun on the French word grue, which also means favourite devices, but here the gaze invites a sense of
courtesan. intimacy and sympathetic psychological penetration,
The portrait seems to invite direct comparison with rather than challenging, and so distancing the viewer, as
Olympia (1863) - in the similarity of the pose, and in in Dejeuner sur l'herbe (1863).
the placing of the dog at Callias' feet - but the
Valadon, Marie Clementine
Valadon, Marie
Rewald (1984)
Clementine
(1867-193 8) A favourite model of renoir,
(Suzanne)
Renoir, The Bathers, 1887: Suzanne Valadon. who is the figure on the left, was encouraged by Degas to
pursue her own artistic career.
225
Valernes, Evariste de Bernardi de
Suzanne Valadon, artist and model, from There is also a large collection of letters to
photograph, c. 1890. Durand-Ruel from the Impressionists: 213
from Renoir, 411 from monet, 86 from pis-
Valernes, Evariste de Bernardi de ( 1 8 1 696) sarro, 16 from sisley, 3 1 from cassatt, and 27
The impecunious son of a nobleman, Valernes from degas. The majority of them tend to be
had studied painting under Delacroix, and his tedious demands for money and other trivia,
work first appeared in the salon in 1857. He which, though they throw light on the day-to-
became friendly with degas in 1855, and shared day concerns of the writers, contribute little to
with him not only a genuine love of art, but an a general understanding of their aesthetic
appreciation of things Italian. It was probably preoccupations.
this aspect of Valernes to which Degas was On the outbreak of the war, Venturi went to
referring in 1865 when he painted a portrait of the USA, where he held posts at various
them both against a window showing a view of universities. In 1945 he returned to ITALY and
Rome (Musee d'Orsay). Valernes was very held a professorship at Rome University until
conscious of the significance of Impressionism, his death.
and had been an enthusiastic reader of dur- Venturi (1939); L. Venturi, Histoire de la
226
La Vie moderne
Monet, Vetheuil, 1880: Monet lived for several years in the village of Vetheuil on the Seine between
Medan and Giverny.
227
Vignon, Victor
Vignon, Victor (1851-1917) Although he and Vuillard, as well as by van gogh, Picasso
exhibited - sometimes as many as 15 or 20 and Matisse. Although his fame rests largely on
paintings - at the impressionist exhibitions of his promotion of the styles that followed
1880, 1 88 1 and 1886, Vignon was regarded by Impressionism, his activities generally raised the
most of his fellow Impressionists as a boring prestige of that movement, and continued to
artist,who kept reverting to his early depen- increase the value of its works. See also theo
dence on corot. A landscape of his in the Ny VAN GOGH, ILLUSTRATION, SPAIN [208]
Carlsberg Glyptotek in Copenhagen does not, A. Vollard, Recollections of a Picture Dealer
however, bear this out entirely; dated 1883, it (1936), En ecoutant Cezanne, Degas et Renoir
reveals considerable vigour and freshness. He (1938)
was a friend of pissarro and was generally
accepted as belonging to his 'faction' rather
than to that of degas.
E. Benezit, Dictionnaire des peintres, sculpteurs,
dessinateurs et graveurs (1966)
started his career in the art world by buying paintings were bought by Alfred barnes. See
prints from the quayside stalls by the Seine and, also patrons and collectors
seduced by the idea of being an art dealer, M.G. de la Coste-Messeliere, 'Unjeune prince
became an apprentice at the gallery of the amateur de l'impressionnisme', L'Oeil (Nov.
Union Artistique. 1969); Renoir, Hayward Gallery, London,
He opened his first gallery in the rue Laffitte, exhibition catalogue (1985)
with an exhibition of sketches by manet. In the
following year he moved to more extensive Walewski, Comte Alexandre (1810-61) The
premises, and started to interest himself in natural son of Napoleon by his Polish mistress,
Cezanne, whose work had been introduced to he became for a while Minister of State with
him by Maurice Denis. This was at a time when responsibility for the arts under napoleon hi,
Cezanne was the only Impressionist who had and it was to him that a petition about the
not really attracted the attention of the dealers, nature of the salon was presented by manet
and Vollard's first exhibition of his works in and Gustave Dore in 1863.
1895 turned out a marked success, establishing Comte Fleury and L. Sonolet, La Societe du
him as the leading dealer in the avant-garde; he Second Empire, 4 vols. (1928); A. de Monzie and
also exhibited pissarro, renoir, degas and L. Febvre, Encyclopedic francaise (1937)
Rodin. He then went on progressively to keep
abreast of what was happening in French art, Wedmore, Sir Frederick (1844-192 1) A
exhibiting works by painters such as Bonnard writer, perhaps over-influenced in his style by
228
Whistler, James Abbott McNeill
View of St Mark's, 1881; Sterling and Francine were following the same path'. There were
all
Clark Art Institute, Williamstown). He did not indeed obvious affinities between Degas and
meet Monet until 1885, but their friendship Whistler; both were dandies, both possessed a
became so close that Monet travelled to visit caustic wit. Whistler, however, was contami-
him in London two years later. Even before this nated by an exuberant egomania, which led to
there are signs of the influence of Whistler's such crises as the lawsuit with Ruskin, the
Nocturnes on some of Monet's works. controversy with Sir William Eden, and other
229
Wolff, Albert
Bastien-Lepage's portrait
Albert Wolff, c. 1880.
(now lost) of the critic
Z
Zandomeneghi, Federico (1841-1917) A
painter who came from a family of sculptors, he
imbroglios that obscured rather than enhanced was involved with the struggle
in his early life
his remarkable gifts. By the 1880s he had for Italian independence, and became associated
moved to a kind of Symbolism, identified in with the Macchiaioli group in Florence (see
England with the Aesthetic movement, and italy). In 1874 he came to paris, where he met
which he defended with wit and eloquence in Renoir, pissarro and degas, the last-named
The Gentle Art of Making Enemies (1890). See exerting a great influence on his style, reflected
also JAPANESE ART, USA [23, 78] in works such as Sleeping Girl (1878; Galleria
J. and E. Pennell, The Life of fames McNeill d'Arte Moderna, Florence). Thanks to the help
Whistler (1908), The Whistler four nal (i92i);D. of Degas, he participated in the impressionist
Sutton, Nocturne; the art of fames McNeill exhibitions of 1879, 1880, 1881 and 1886, and
Whistler (1963); S. Weintraub, Whistler; a durand-ruel took him up and promoted his
biography (1974) works. His pastels were highly praised. See also
CAFES, PASTELS
M. Cinotti, Zandomeneghi (i960); N. Broude,
The Macchiaioli (1987)
230
Zola, Emile
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A keen photographer, Zola took this picture of A contemporary poster advertising the serial
daudet, Turgenev and the goncourts. It was criticism was tinctured with metaphors chosen
not, however, until after the fall of the Empire from the battlefield rather than the art gallery.
that he began the great cycle of novels on which Published for the most part in the columns of
his fame is largely based: the Rougon-Macquart L'Evenement, a selection of his art reviews
series, which in some 20 books set out to give a appeared in book form in 1880, under the
complete picture of virtually every section of significant title of Mes Haines (My Hates).
French society in the latter half of the 19th c. His He also saw the Impressionists exemplars
as
reputation was further enhanced in 189798 of the new spirit of realism in the arts, which he
when he became embroiled in the Dreyfus and his colleagues were expressing in literature.
affair, was sentenced to a year's imprisonment Devoid, on the whole, of any marked visual
for insulting the army - a fate he escaped by he interpreted this 'realism' as the
sensibility,
taking refuge in England for a short time and, of the movement, whereas to the
actual essence
virtually single-handed, succeeded in obtaining painters themselves it was peripheral, their
the Captain's eventual vindication as a result of major innovation being a new way of seeing
one of the most famous polemics of all time, the things. When it came to describing or evaluat-
pamphlet f accuse. ing individual paintings, his vocabulary became
A man of enormous mental energy and imprecise and laudatory in the most generalized
unflagging application, Zola was tireless in his way. Essentially man, he tended on
a literary
criticism of the establishment, and assiduous in the whole doing what writers
to see painters as
his opposition to injustice. It was these concerns did, but in a less satisfactory way. On the other
that were partly responsible for his impassioned hand, he was a superb publicist and an emi-
defence of the Impressionists. He had become nently readable writer, and it is almost imposs-
friendly with the group thanks to his contacts ible to overestimate the value of his support for
with Cezanne, and to the fact that he was a the Impressionists up to 1868, when he was
frequent visitor to the cafe guerbois and on L'Evenement.
relieved of his post
similar haunts. He came to see them as From
then until 1880, when he reviewed the
'fighters', and for long the vocabulary of his salon of that year, his writings on art were
231
General bibliography
General bibliography
The following works will provide the reader with relevant of Manet and his Followers. London and New York.
background information. For titles covering more specialized Cooper, D. (1954): The Courtauld Collection. London.
aspects of the movement, consult the bibliographies which Crespelle, J.-P. (198 1): La I'ie quotidienne des impressionmstes.
follow individual entries. Bibliographical references given in Pans.
abbreviated form after the entries are indicated bv a *. The Crisis of Impressionism, 1878-82. J. Isaacson t'f al..
232
Comparative chronology
*Hamilton,G.H. (1954): Manet and his Critics, New Haven and Renoir, J. House, Arts Council of Great Britain, London
London. (1974)-
Hamilton, G.H. (1967): Painting and Sculpture in Europe, 1880- Rewald, J. (1942): Pissarro's Letters to his Son Lucien, London;
1940, London. revised edn, New York (1972).
*Harrison, C.A, and H.C. White (1965): Canvas and Careers; *Rewald, J. The History of Impressionism, 4th revised
(1973):
Institutional Change in the French Painting World, New edn, London and New York.
York. *Rewald, J. (1984): The Letters of Cezanne, revised edn, New
Herbert, R.L. (1988): Impressionism; Art, Leisure, and Parisian York, first pub. Paris, 1937; Engl, trans. London, 1941.
Society, New Haven and London. *Rewald, J. (1985): Studies in Impressionism, London and New
Hillairet, J. (1964): Dictionnaire historique des rues de Paris, 2 York.
vols., Pans, 2nd edn. *Rewald, J. (1986): Cezanne; a biography, London and New
Impressionism, J. House, Royal Academy of Arts, London York.
(1974)- Rewald, J. (1986): Studies in Post-Impressionism, London and
Impressionism in 1877, Dixon Gallery, Memphis (1977). New York.
*Letheve,J. (1972): Daily Life of French Artists in the Nineteenth Roberts, R. de B., and J. Roberts (1987): Growing up with the
Century, London. Impressionists, London.
Levine, S.Z. (1976): Monet and his Critics, New York and Roskill, M. (1970): Van Gogh, Gauguin and the Impressionist
London. Circle, London.
*Lloyd, C., and R. Thomson (1986): Impressionist Drawings, Rothenstein, W. (1932): Men and Memories, London.
Oxford. The Second Empire; Art in France under Napoleon III,]. Rishel,
McQuillan, M. (1986): Impressionist Portraits, London and Philadelphia Museum of Art (1983).
Boston. Seigel, J. (1986): Bohemian Paris; Culture, Politics and the
Manet, 1832-83, F. Cachin etal., Metropolitan Museum, New Boundaries of Bourgeois Life, 18301930, New York.
York and Paris (1983), and London (1984). Shiff, R. (1984): Cezanne and the End of Impressionism, Chicago
*Milner, J. (1988): The Studios of Paris; the Capital of Art in the and London.
Late Nineteenth Century, New Haven and London. *Sloane, J.C. (195 1): French Painting between the Past and the
Monneret, S. (1978-81): L' Impressionnisme et son epoque, 4 Present, Princeton.
vols., Pans. *Ventun, L. (1939): Les Archives de V impressionnisme, 2 vols.,
The New Painting; Impressionism 1874-86, C.S. Moffett et al.. Paris.
The Fine Arts Museums, San Francisco (1986). Vollard, A. (1936): Recollections of a Picture Dealer, London
Nochhn, L. (ed.) (1966): Impressionism and Post-Impressionism, and Boston; Paris (1937).
1874-1904; Sources and Documents, Englewood Cliffs, New White, B.E. (ed.) (1978): Impressionism in Perspective, Engle-
Jersey. wood Cliffs, New Jersey.
Nochlin, L. (1971): Realism, London. *Zeldin, T. (1973 and 1977): France, 1845-1945, 2 vols.,
Pool, P. (1967): Impressionism, London and York. New Oxford.
Reff, T. (ed.) (1981): Modern Art in Paris 1855-1900, New
York and London.
Comparative chronology
1856 Degas leaves for Italy and stays there for the best part of 1856 Duranty founds the magazine Realisme. End of the
three years, making extensive trips to Rome, Florence and Crimean War. Liszt publishes his Preludes, Victor Hugo Les
Naples, with occasional visits to Paris. Contemplations. Peace congress in Paris. Death of Schumann.
1857 Manet travels to Germany, Holland and Italy. Renoir 1857 Millet exhibits The Gleaners. Baudelaire publishes Les
starts attending evening classes in drawing. Sisley is in Fleurs du mal, and Flaubert Madame Bovary; both are
England to learn the language and prepare for a commercial prosecuted for offending public morality. Alfred de Musset
career. Monet, in Le Havre, begins to attract attention with and Glinka die. Bunsen and Kirchhoff make the first spectral
his caricatures. analysis of light.
233
Comparative chronology
1858 Pissarro attends the Academie Suisse and meets Monet; 1858 Slavery is abolished in Russia. Pliicker discovers cath-
Monet meets Boudin, who encourages him in his painting. ode rays. The Virgin appears at Lourdes, Hiroshige dies.
Renoir gives up painting on porcelain. Morisot copies old Puccini and Leoncavallo are born.
mastersat the Louvre, where Manet is also working.
1859 Manet rejected at the Salon. Degas returns from Italy. 1859 The French acquire Indo-China. Darwin publishes his
Monet goes to Paris and meets Pissarro at the Academie Origin of Species. The Suez Canal is started. First oil well
Suisse. Renoir starts working as an artist. Morisot becomes a drilled in the USA. Tennyson publishes Idylls of the King.
disciple of Corot. Battles of Magenta and Solferino. Wagner starts to compose
Tristan und Isolde.
i860 Degas paints Young Spartans Exercising. Manet estab- i860 The rotary press is invented in England. The kingdom
himself in the Batignolles area. Pissarro is working in
lishes of:Italy is formed; France acquires Nice and Savoy. Lister
the countryside around Paris. Morisot begins out-door introduces modern antiseptic treatment. Free trade treaty
painting. between France and Britain. Lincoln becomes President of
the USA. Death of Schopenhauer.
1861 Manet successful at the Salon; he meets Baudelaire and 1861 Civil war in the USA. Siemens invents the electric
Duranty. Degas continues painting historical subjects. furnace. Dostoevsky publishes House of the Dead. Prince
Pissarro meets Cezanne and Guillaumin at the Academie Albert dies. French expedition to Mexico.
Suisse. Monet does his military service in Algeria.
1862 Manet comes into his inheritance; he paints La Musique 1862 Victor Hugo's Les Miserahles and Turgenev's Fathers
aux Tuilenes and meets Degas, who is beginning to paint race and Sons are published. Bismarck becomes prime minister of
scenes atLongchamp. Cezanne in Pans fails the Ecole des Prussia. Foundation stone of the new Pans Opera by Gamier
Beaux-Arts entrance exam. Monet is working in Le Havre. laid; Debussy born. The French annexe Cochin-China.
Renoir enters Glevre's studio, as do Sislev and Bazille. Slavery abolished in Russia.
1863 Manet marries and has an exhibition at Martinet's 1863 Delacroix invents refrigerators. Beau de
dies. Tellier
gallery. Degas is in Italy. Pissarro has a son. Cezanne studies at Rochas the internal combustion engine. Nadar starts making
the Academie Suisse; Monet works in forest of Fontainebleau, balloon ascents. The Ecole des Beaux-Arts is reorganized.
and Morisot at Pontoise. The Salon des Refuses contains Haussmann commences his rebuilding of Pans. Jules Verne
works bv Manet. Cezanne, Pissarro, Guillaumin and publishes Five Weeks in a Balloon. Poland revolts against
Whistler.' Russia.
1864 Manet is rejected at Salon; his portrait is painted by 1864 The Goncourts publish their realist novel Germinie
Degas. Pissarro exhibits at the Salon. Monet meets Courbet. Lacerteux. Chevreul his Notes stir les couleurs. Socialist
works in Honfleur with Bazille, Boudin and Jongkind; congress in London. The first petrol-driven car appears in
Renoir meets Diaz when painting in the forest of Fontaine- France. The Geneva Convention lays down rules for war and
bleau. Bazille decides to take up painting full-time. Morisot the Red Cross is born. The right to strike becomes legalized in
has two works accepted at the Salon. France. Maximilian is proclaimed emperor in Mexico.
1865 Manet's second exhibition at Martinet's is well- 1865 Wagner finishes Tristan und Isolde. Lewis Caroll pub-
received, but Olympia at the Salon arouses a storm; he spends lishes Alice in Wonderland, and Mendel his researches on
ten days in Spain. Pissarro is again successful at the Salon. heredity. Abraham Lincoln is assassinated and Palmerston
Cezanne returns to Aix. Monet paints Dejeuner sur I'herbe. dies. Rockefeller opens his first petrol refinery in Ohio.
Renoir works in Fontainebleau and exhibits at the Salon. Educational reforms in France.
Bazille shares his studio with Monet. Morisot paints in
Normandv and exhibits at the Salon.
1866 Manet meets Zola and Cezanne. Pissarro is praised by 1866 Zola publisheshis book of Salon reviews, Daudet his
Zola, but breaks with Corot. Cezanne protests about his mon moulin, Verlaine his first book of poems, and
Lettres de
rejection by the Salon. Monet meets Manet and has success at Swinburne his Poems and Ballads. Strauss publishes his Blue
the Salon; he works at Sainte-Adresse. Renoir shares Bazille's Danube waltz; Offenbach's La I'ie partsienne receives its first
studio and paints views of Pans; Sislev spends some time with performance. The Prussians defeat the Austrians at Sadowa.
Renoir at the home of the Le Coeur family at Berck. Morisot The Swede Alfred Nobel invents dynamite, and the Ameri-
is again successful at the Salon; she works in Brittany. cans Sholes and Schoule. the typewriter. The French abandon
Mexico.
1867 Courbet and Manet arrange special exhibitions at the 1867 Karl Marx
publishes Das Kapital, and Ibsen's Peer Gynt
ParisWorld's Fair; Zola publishes articles about the latter. has performance. Baudelaire dies, as do Ingres and
its first
Degas has two portraits in the Salon. Pissarro signs a petition Theodore Rousseau. Bonnard, Galsworthy. Pirandello, Tos-
for another Salon des Refuses. Monet exhibits views of Pans; canini and Nolde are born. There are constitutional reforms
he also works on the Channel coast at Honfleur. Renoir, in Hungary, Austria and Germany, and there is trouble in
rejected at Salon, paints in the open air at Fontainebleau. Ireland.Monier invents reinforced concrete. Gounod's Ro-
meo and Juliet has its first performance at the Paris Opera.
Execution of the Emperor Maximilian in Mexico. Financial
crisis in France.
234
Comparative chronology
1868 Manet paints his portrait of Zola; he takes a trip to 1868 Wagner's Meistersinger; death of Rossini. Dynamo and
England where he meets Morisot. Daubigny helps Pissarro synthetic perfumes invented. Gladstone becomes Prime
get two works accepted at the Salon. Monet also accepted at Minister. Dostoevsky publishes The Idiot, and Maxim Gorki
the Salon thanks to Daubigny, yet apparently attempts is born. Japan opened to the rest of the world. First cycling
suicide.Renoir is accepted at the Salon and praised by the race at Saint-Cloud. Charles Cros invents colour photogra-
Morisot becomes friendly with Degas and Puvis de
critics. phy. Grieg composes his piano concerto.
Chavannes.
1869 Cafe Guerbois becomes the favourite centre of the 1869 Berlioz, Lamartine, Saint-Beuve and Overbeck die.
Impressionists.Eva Gonzales becomes a pupil and model of Flaubert publishes L'Education sentimentale . An international
Manet. Pissarro settles in Louveciennes, and Cezanne falls in art exhibition is held in Munich. The Vatican Council, which
love with Hortense Fiquet. Monet has his paintings in Le declares the infallibility of the pope, opens in Rome, and
Havre seized by his creditors, and becomes an habitue of the hydroelectric power is used for the first time. Matisse and
Cafe Guerbois; he works at Bougival with Renoir, who has Frank Lloyd Wright are born. Suez Canal opened.
one work accepted by the Salon.
1870 Manet is turned down as a Salon juror, and figures in 1870 Outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War. French defeated
Fantin-Latour's Studio in the Batignolles Quarter; he joins the at Sedan; Third Republic proclaimed in Paris. Dickens,
National Guard when war breaks out and serves under Dumas and Jules de Goncourt die. Millais' Boyhood of Sir
Meissonier. Degas, on the other hand, joins the infantry, and Walter Raleigh and Frith's The First Cigarette are the most
Cezanne dodges conscription. Monet and Pissarro solve the popular exhibits at the Royal Academy Summer Show in
problem by leaving for England; Renoir becomes a cuirassier London. The first synthetic material is manufactured in the
and is posted first to Bordeaux and then to Tarbes. Bazille is USA, where the first turbine motor also makes its appear-
not so lucky and is killed on active service on 28 August. ance. Rome becomes the official capital of Italy. Paris
besieged.
1871 Courbet is involved in destruction of the Napoleonic 1871 France surrenders to the Prussians. The Commune in
column in the Place Vendome. Manet moves to Bordeaux; Parisis bloodily repressed in May by governmental forces.
Degas travels to Normandy and, briefly, London, where Thiers becomes President. The first of Zola's great series of
Pissarro and Monet have works rejected by the Royal novels on the Rougon-Macquart family is published, and
Academy, but are taken up by Durand-Ruel. At the end of the Nietzsche publishes his first book. Ruskin becomes the first
year Monet goes to Holland; Pissarro returns to Paris. Renoir Slade Professor at Oxford, and Verdi's Aida is given its first
is in Paris for most of the time, but works at Bougival with performance at the opera house in Cairo. Darwin's Descent of
Sisley. Morisot moves to Saint-Germain during the troubles. Man is published.
1872 Manet sells 29 paintings to Durand-Ruel for 51,000 1872 Business boom in France, despite defeat and the
he travels in Holland and exhibits at the Salon. Degas is
francs; payment of heavy reparations to the Germans. Durand-Ruel
introduced to Durand-Ruel and leaves France with his arranges an exhibition in London. An international congress
brother for the USA. Pissarro settles in Pontoise and is is held at The Hague to seek a universal peace. Daudet
intermittently joined by Cezanne, who has just had a son. publishes Tartarin de Tarascon, and Samuel Butler Erewhon.
Monet, living at Argenteuil where he settled after a visit to Whistler paints a portrait of Carlyle. Grant is re-elected
Holland, is joined by Renoir. Morisot visits Spain. president of the USA. Cesar Franck becomes professor at the
Conservatory.
1873 Manet's Bon Bock is well received at the Salon, and he 1873 The beginning of a period of economic recession,
meets Mallarme for the first time. Degas, after a visit to New- which and eventually gets Durand-Ruel into
hits picture sales
Orleans, returns to France and has one of his pastels bought by difficulties. Courbet takes refuge in Switzerland, and Marshal
the American Mrs Havemeyer. Pissarro has a good year, his Mac-Mahon becomes President. Rimbaud publishes his
pictures fetching fairly high prices at auction. Monet, now Saison en enfer, and Hans Andersen his Fairytales. Napoleon III
working in Argenteuil, takes up the plan first suggested in dies in England, and a short-lived republic is set up in Spain.
1867 for a group exhibition. Renoir enters the Durand-Ruel Thomas Eakins finishes The Biglen Brothers Turning the Stake,
meets Guillaumin, and has
stable, a considerable success at the and Tolstoy publishes Anna Karenina. End of German
Exposition des Refuses. occupation o( France.
1874 First Impressionist exhibition held at 35 boulevard des 1874 Foundation stone of the church of Sacre-Coeur on
Capucines. Durand-Ruel stages an Impressionist exhibition in Montmartre laid. Winston Churchill is born, and Disraeli
his London gallery. Manet starts to reap the benefits of his becomes Prime Minister. Stanley commences his major
friendship with Mallarme, who protests about the rejection of African exploration, and Verdi conducts the first perform-
his paintings by the Salon. Refusing to participate in the ance of his Requiem. Alfonso XII becomes king of Spain. Lady
Impressionist exhibition, Manet works at Argenteuil with Butler paints The Roll Call. Gleyre dies.
Monet. Pissarro insists on Cezanne being allowed to partici-
pate and, though he sells one of the works he shows, he
arouses derision with his Modern Olympia. Renoir joins the
others at Argenteuil, and Sisley visits England. Morisot, who
exhibits nine works, spends part of the year with the Manet
family at Fecamp and marries Eugene, Edouard Manet's
brother.
235
Comparative chronology
1875 A largely unsuccessful sale of works by Impressionists at 1875 Corot, Millet, Bizet and Hans Andersen die, and Ravel
the Hotel Drouot. Durand-Ruel closes his London gallery. isborn. The Third Republic is formally constituted by a series
Degas has financial problems, and Pissarro gets involved in a of constitutional laws. Chromosomes are discovered by a
new association of artists, which he persuades Cezanne to German and a Scot. Grieg produces Peer Gyrtt. Pierre
join. Monet goes through a worse than usual financial period, Savorgnan de Brazza explores those parts of Africa north of
but Renoir's lot is improving slightly, thanks to the support of the Congo, and so makes possible an extension of the French
Chocquet and Caillebotte. Morisot visits England and spends empire.
some time on the Isle of Wight.
meeting Charpentier. Seurat decides, with family support, to Sawyer. First Socialist International dissolved. Bakunin and
become a painter. Mallarme publishes a Mattering article Georges Sand die.
about Manet.
1877 Third exhibition, at 6 rue Le Peletier; 18 participants. 1877 Turkey and Russia at war; Queen Victoria becomes
Degas invites Cassatt to join the group, and Pissarro and Empress of India. Edison invents the phonograph, and
Cezanne leave L'Union. Monet, still in dire straits, exhibits 30 Thomson electric welding. Thiers and Courbet die, and
paintings, Renoir 17, and Morisot 19. Riviere edits Saint-Saens composes Samson et Dalila. Durand-Ruel is again
L' Impressionniste during the run of the exhibition. The owing to the bankruptcy of a
in severe financial difficulties,
Nouvelle-Athenes becomes the favourite meeting place of financier who was supporting
him. Grosvenor Gallery opens
the Impressionist group. On 28 May another auction sale is in London. Paten's The Renaissance popularizes Leonardo's
held, at which the average price obtained is 169 francs. Mona Lisa. France colonizes the Congo.
1878 Manet moves studio to the rue d'Amsterdam and helps 1878 Paris World's Fair. Duret publishes Les Peintres
Monet, who has a second child and is now living at Vetheuil, impressionnistes, and Romania becomes an independent
where he is joined by Mme Hoschede and her children. kingdom. The population of the USA tops that of any-
Renoir continues to enjoy Charpentier's patronage, and European country except Russia. The Congress of Berlin
paints a portrait of Mme Charpentier. Pissarro rents a room in attempts to settle the affairs of Eastern Europe and, as a result,
Montmartre to show his pictures to possible clients, and also Britain acquires Cyprus. Leo XII becomes pope. And When
sends two pictures to Florence for an exhibition organized by Did You Last See Your Father? makes a big hit at the Royal
Diego Martelh. Cezanne has a bitter row with his father, and Academy, London. Whistler v. Ruskin case. Telephones are
is helped by Zola. installed in Pans.
1879 Fourth exhibition at 28 avenue de l'Opera; 15 partici- 1879 Daumier and Couture die. Paul Klee is born. Zola
pants. Manet exhibits 2 works at the Salon, though the publishes Mes Haines, containing much of his earlier art
exhibition savaged by Huysmans; all Cezanne's entries are
is criticism. Charpentier starts La Vie modeme. the offices of
rejected. Renoir's Mme Charpentier and her Children is not only- which also house art exhibitions. Bouguereau exhibits his
accepted but highly praised, and later in the year he has a one- sensational Birth of Venus, and Meredith publishes The Egoist.
man exhibition at the offices of La 'ie modeme. Pissarro
I In America Edison invents the electric light bulb, and Hughes
invites Gauguin to submit to the group exhibition, and he the microphone, whilst in Germany Siemens produces the
shows 1 sculpture and 7 paintings. Morisot, who is pregnant, first electric locomotive. Reform of the French educational
does not participate. system is inaugurated. The French socialist party is formed.
1880 Fifth exhibition at 10 rue des Pyramides; 18 partici- 1880 Flaubert, Duranty, Offenbach and George Eliot die.
pants. Manet's Execution of the Emperor Maximilian is exhib- Panama Canal Company founded. Napoleon Ill's only son,
ited successfully in the USA and he has a one-man exhibition the Prince Imperial, is killed in Britain's war against Zulus.
of pastels at La le modeme: his health continues to deteriorate.
I Maupassant publishes Boule de suif and Dostoevsky The
Degas works with Cassatt and Pissarro on etchings, and Brothers Karamazov; Ibsen's The Doll's House is first per-
Cezanne, living mainly in Pans, makes several visits to Zola at formed. Gladstone introduces a bill for Home Rule for
Medan. Monet also has an exhibition at La Vie modeme. Ireland. Lawson and Starlev invent the modern bicvcle.
1881 Sixth exhibition at 35 boulevard des Capucines; 13 1881 The Boer War breaks out. Tsar Alexander II is
participants. Manet, now ill, is awarded the Legion
seriously assassinated.Dostoevsky, Carlyle and Mussorgsky die; Pi-
of Honour. Pissarro is working in Pontoise with Gauguin and casso is born. Offenbach's Tales of Hoffmann has its first
Cezanne, who at the end of the year returns to Aix. Renoir posthumous production. The technique of process-engrav-
travels a great deal, first to Algiers, and then to Italy, where, ing is invented in Germany by Meisenbach. and the first
after visiting Venice and Florence, he goes to Pompeii. electric tramway is inaugurated in Berlin. The French occupy
Morisot, now living at Bougival, spends the winter in Nice. Tunisia. Antonin Proust becomes Minister of Fine Arts.
1882 Seventh exhibition at 251 rue Saint-Honore; 9 partici- 1882 Garibaldi, Rossetti, Darwin, Longfellow and Emerson
pants. Manet shows the Bar at the Folies-Bergere at the Salon. die.The folding camera is invented in the USA. A Triple
Degas makes a trip to Spain. Pissarro moves from Pontoise to Alliance is formed between Germany, Austria and Italy. The
Osny. while Cezanne, in Paris most of the year, moves to the Catholic Union Internationale bank, which supported
Jas de Bouffan in September. Renoir stays in L'Estaque, and Durand-Ruel, crashes in Paris. Oscar Wilde publishes his
then goes to Algiers to recuperate from an illness. Seurat is Poems; Wagner finishes Parsifal; Gaudi begins La Sagrada
painting Barbizonesque landscapes around Pans. Familia in Barcelona.
236
Comparative chronology
1883 Manet dies on 30 April. Durand-Ruel arranges a series 1883 France's financial position improves. Wagner, Karl
of one-man exhibitions in his new gallery: Monet in March, Marx and Gustave Dore die; Mussolini, Kafka and Utrillo are
Renoir in April, Pissarro in May, Sisley in June. He also born. Whistler exhibits Portrait of the Artist's Mother at the
organizes exhibitions in London, Rotterdam, Berlin, Boston Salon. Brazzaville, capital of the French Congo, is founded.
and New York. Pissarro works closely with Gauguin. Renoir Huysmans publishes L' Art modeme, Robert Louis Stevenson
visits Guernsey and the south of France, where he and Monet Kidnapped, and Maupassant Une Vie. The first petrol-driven
meet Cezanne. Caillebotte draws up his will, leaving his car is produced in France, and the Maxim machine-gun
collection to the Louvre. Monet moves to Giverny. appears in the USA. Marxist party founded in Russia.
still having financial difficulties. Monet, whose own affairs transformer by Gaulard, and Charles Algernon Parsons
are on the mend, exhibits at Petit's Exposition Internationale. perfects the steam turbine; Chardonnet invents artificial silk.
Pissarro moves to Eragny. Renoir seeks for a new style. The Societe des Vingt holds its first exhibition. Huysmans
Morisot paints in the Bois de Boulogne, and Signac, Redon publishes A Rebours. Burne-Jones paints King Cophetua and the
and Seurat get involved in the new Societe des Independants. Beggar Maid. Trades unions are legalized in France.
1885 Degas meets Gauguin and Sickert at Dieppe. Pissarro 1885 Victor Hugo dies and Ezra Pound is born. Whistler
fallsunder the influence of Seurat and Signac. Cezanne, who gives his Ten o'clock Lecture; first production of Ibsen's The
is mainly working in and around Aix, visits Zola and goes to Wild Duck. Creation of the Belgian Congo. Pasteur invents a
La Roche-Guyon to see Renoir, who has by now evolved vaccine against rabies. Mallarmeis appointed a teacher at the
what he feels is a satisfactory new style. Monet exhibits at College Rollin. Zola publishes Germinal, Nietzsche Thus
Petit's fourth Exposition Internationale. Sisley has great Spake Zarathustra, and Maupassant Bel Ami. Brahms com-
financial problems, despite his contact with Theo van Gogh; pletes his fourth symphony. Munch visits Paris. Millais
Durand-Ruel is also in difficulties. Gauguin returns from becomes a baronet.
Denmark, and Seurat produces La Grande Jatte. Durand-Ruel
organizes an Impressionist exhibition in Brussels.
1886 Last exhibition at 1 rue Laffitte; 17 participants. 1886 Whistler retrospective exhibition held at Petit's. Liszt
Durand-Ruel has a successful American exhibition. Degas and Monticelli die. The New English Art Club is founded in
visits Naples. Pissarro exhibits his first Pointillist-style works London. Feneon publishes Les Impressionnistes en 1886;
and Seurat and Signac exhibit with the Impression-
insists that Verlaine publishes Rimbaud's Les Illuminations, and Zola
ists.Because of the presence of Seurat's works, Monet refuses L'Oeuvre. First performance of D'Indy's Symphony on a
to participate and, along with Renoir, exhibits at Petit's fifth Mountain Air. Henry James finishes The Bostonians.
Exposition Internationale. Cezanne breaks with Zola after the
publication of L'Oeuvre and marries Hortense Fiquet. Vin-
cent van Gogh arrives in Paris.
1887 Gauguin leaves France for Martinique. Pissarro and 1887 Verdi's Otello receives its first performance. Alfred
Seurat exhibit with Les Vingt in Brussels. Renoir shows Gilbert's Erosis unveiled in London; the foundations of the
examples of his new style, as exemplified in the Bathers, at Eiffel Tower are laid. Faure's Requiem is given its first
Petit's and, though praised by Van Gogh, it is not well performance. Lanston invents the monotype printing pro-
received either by Huysmans or Astruc. Dealers begin to find cess; Hertz discovers the nature of electromagnetic waves.
that it is easier to sell work by the Impressionists. France signs a treaty with China.
1888 Durand-Ruel organizes an important exhibition and 1888 Wilhelm II becomes Emperor of Germany. George
opens a gallery in New York. Still anxious about his new Moore publishes Confessions of a Young Man, containing
style, Renoir has begun to suffer from arthritis. Under the recollections of his meetings with the Impressionists. Rimsky-
influence of Muybridge Degas is creating sculptures of horses. Korsakov's Scheherezade and Richard Strauss' Don Juan are
Gauguin meets Bernard at Pont-Aven, and they hammer out given first performances. Paper photographic films invented
the principles of Synthetism. Monet visits the south of France, by Eastman, and hormones are isolated. Ruskin's Praeterita is
and refuses the Legion of Honour. published.
1889 The International Exhibition attracts many visitors to 1889 Eiffel Tower opened. The Nabis emerge as a group.
Paris. Durand-Ruel organizes an exhibition of painter- Robert Browning dies. The Symbolist magazine La Revue
engravers, including the Impressionists. The collection of blanche starts publication. The chemist Chevreul, to whose
Impressionist paintings amassed by Henry Hill of Brighton is discoveries the Impressionists owed so much, dies;
sold at Christie's, averaging 60-70 guineas each. Monet has an haematology is discovered. As many as 32,250,297 people
exhibition at Boussod and Valadon's, followed by a joint the International Exhibition in Paris to see the displays of
visit
exhibition with Rodin at Petit's. 60.000 exhibitors. Boulanger flees the country.
1890 Pissarro abandons Divisionism and has a one-man 1890 Cesar Franck, Vincent van Gogh and Cardinal New-
exhibition at Boussod and Valadon's. Monet, with growing man die. Dunlop invents the rubber tyre. Bismarck is sacked.
economic success, buys the house at Giverny. Dinner First performance of Ibsen's Hcdda Gabler.
meetings at the Cafe Riche become a regular feature of the
Impressionists' lives. Renoir begins to achieve real success,
selling works to Durand-Ruel for 7500 francs each. Van Gogh
dies, and his brother Theo leaves Boussod and Valadon.
237
Gazetteer of the major Impressionist
collections
and L'Orchestre de I'Opera; Manet's logne possesses Renoir's Albert Sisley and 3 bronzes (Mother and Child,
Olympia, Dejeuner sur I'herbe, Lola de and his Wife, Monet's Rocks at Etretat, Washerwoman, Venus Victorious) and 3
Valence, The Balcony and Portrait of Sisley's Bridge at Hampton Court and Sisleys. There are also many works by
Zola; Monet's Women in the Garden, Pissarro's L 'Hermitage, Pontoise. English artists influenced by the Im-
fragments of Dejeuner sur I'herbe, sev- Essen, Folkwang Museum Contains pressionists: 39 Sargents (incl. Monet
eral canvases in the Rouen cathedral 4 Renoirs (incl. Lise with a Parasol), 2 Painting at the Edge of a Wood), 42
series, a Gare St-Lazare, Haystacks and Manets (incl. Portrait of Faure as Ham- Sickerts and 37 Wilson Steers.
Waterlilies; Monsot's The Cradle; let), 2 Cezannes and 1 work each by SCOTLAND: Edinburgh, National
Pissarro's Woman in a Field; Renoir's Monet (Waterlilies), Pissarro (Snow at Gallery of Scotland The Impression-
The Swing, Nude in Sunlight, Dancing at Louveciennes) and Sisley. In addition ist paintings here come mainly from the
the Moulin de la Galette, Gabrielle with a there are 4 Gauguins, 4 Van Goghs, 5 coll. of Sir Alexander Maitland (1958,
Rose; Sisley's Floods at Port-Marly; works by Corinth, 3 by Liebermann i960) and include 5 Renoirs, 4 Degas
Whistler's Portrait of the Artist's Mother; and 1 by Slevogt. (incl. the Portrait of Diego Martelli), 2
238
Gazetteer
Monets (Poplars, Haystacks), works by Maximilian), 5 Sisleys (Early Snow at dren), 1 8 by Manet (Dead Christ and
Morisot, Pissarro, Sisley, Whistler, Louveciennes), Cezannes, 4 Sickerts,
5 Angels, portraits of George Moore and
Gauguin (Vision After the Sermon) and 6 Gauguins (D'ou venons-nous? Que Faure, Boating, The Spanish Singer, Mile
Van Gogh. sommes-nous? Ou allons-nous?), 5 Van Victorine as an Espada), 18 by Cezanne
Glasgow, Burrell Collection The Goghs, a Caillebotte, a Guillaumin, a (Portrait oj Hortense 16 by
Liquet),
coll. of William and Lady Burrell
Sir Morisot and some Cassatts (Five o'clock Pissarro (Cote du fallals, Pontoise), 5 by
(1944) contains works by Degas (Por- Tea, Woman in Black at the Opera). Sisley, 2 each by Lebourg and
trait of Duranty, The Rehearsal), Manet, Chicago, Art Institute of Chicago A Guillaumin, 1 each by Morisot and
Monet and Renoir; it also includes substantial holding of Impressionist Sickert; there are 9 Van Goghs and 4
others by Cezanne (Chateau de Medan), works, donated in 1922 by
incl. several Gauguins. The American Impression-
Pissarro, Sisley and Gauguin, as well as Mrs Potter Palmer, a friend of Cassatt. ists are also well represented: there are
several drawings, prints and sculptures. Highlights include: a self-portrait by many prints and paintings by Cassatt -
wales: Cardiff, National Museum Bazille, Caillebotte's Rue de Paris, temps largely from the havemeyer collection
of Wales Almost all of the works held de pluie, Cezanne's Bay of Marseilles, - incl. Lady at the Teatable, The Cup of
here are from the Gwendoline and seen from L'Estaque, several ballet scenes Tea and Young Mother Sewing; Whistler
Margaret davies coll. (1951, 1963): by Degas and his Millinery Shop, portraits, and works by Robinson, Sar-
there are 12 Monets, 4 Cezannes, 3 Manet's Christ Mocked by Soldiers and gent and Twachtman.
Manets, 2 Pissarros, and works by the Races at Longchamp, Monet's Beach New York, Museum of Modern Art
Morisot, Renoir, Sisley, Sickert, Wil- at Ste-Adresse, Renoir's Oarsmen at The Lillie P. Bliss collection forms the
son Steer and Whistler, also sculptures Chatou and Two Little Circus Girls. It nucleus of the museum's painting coll.,
by Degas and Renoir. also houses Seurat's Sunday Afternoon oti which includes 1 Cezanne oils (Melt-
1
NORWAY eum The museum's coll. is esp. strong Poplars, Renoir's Bathers and a portrait
Oslo, Nasjonalgalleriet Works in- in works by the Impressionists, with of Aline Charigot, Degas' Ballet Class,
clude 4 Manets (Mme Manet in the works by Cezanne (Mont Ste-Victoire), Cassatt's Woman and Child Driving,
Conservatory, L'Exposition Universelle Gauguin, Van Gogh, Manet, Monet Family Group Reading, and a portrait of
of 1867, Portrait of de Nittis), 4 Cezannes, (Bh'd des Capucines, late Waterlilies can- her husband and son, and Cezanne's
3 Degas, 2 Monets (Rainy Weather, vas), Pissarro (far din des Mathurins, Mont Ste-Victoire; many are drawn
Etretat), 2 Renoirs, 2 Guillaumins, a Pontoise),Renoir and Seurat. There are from Tyson bequest of 23 Impres-
the
Morisot and 6 Gauguins. Over half of pastels by Cassatt and Morisot, and a sionist and Post-Impressionist works.
the exhibition rooms are devoted to gouache and pastel by Degas which was There are also 6 paintings by Sargent.
Norwegian artists, esp. Munch. purchased by Cassatt's friend Louisine Washington, D.C., National Gal-
Elder (later Havemeyer); it was one of lery of Art French I9th-c. painting is
SWITZERLAND the first Impressionist works exhibited one of the National Gallery's outstand-
Winterthur, Oskar Reinhart Foun- in the USA. ing areas, thanks largely to the Chester
dation Reinhart's favourite artist was New York, Brooklyn Museum Dale and mellon colls. The body of
Renoir, and this is reflected in the high Together with works by the American works by Manet is most important:
number of his paintings to be found Impressionist school (Merntt Chase, Dead Toreador, The Old Musician, The
here: 12 oils include the Portrait of Robinson, Sargent, Twachtman), the Tragic Actor, Masked Ball at the Opera,
Chocquet and numerous plein-air land- museum owns Degas' Mile Fiocre in the The Railroad, The Plum. There are
scapes. The works by Cezanne are a
1 1 Ballet 'La Source', Pissarro's The Climb- several Renoirs (Diana, The Pont Neuf
further indication of his taste. There are ing Path, Pontoise and Cassatt's Mother Paris, and an impressive
Odalisque)
also 4 Manets (incl. At the Cafe), 2 and Child, as 4 landscapes by
as well group of Monets, incl. views of Argen-
Pissarros, a Sisley, a Monet (Ice Floes on Monet, a Cezanne and a Van
Renoir, a teuil, Vetheuil, London and Rouen,
the Seine)and works by Degas (incl. a Gogh self-portrait. There are also sev- also important works by Degas
drawing of Giulietta Bellelh). Van eral graphic works by Cassatt and (Edmondo and Therese Morbilli), Pissarro
Gogh is represented by 4 paintings and Degas. (Blvd des Italiens), Bazille, Guillaumin,
2 drawings. New York, Metropolitan Museum Sisley and Cezanne (Portrait of the Art-
of Art One of the world's greatest ist's (The Boating Party,
Father). Cassatt
UNITED STATES colls, of Impressionist works. A large Girl Arranging her Hair, Mother Wearing
Boston, Museum of Fine Arts One group by Degas includes 19 paintings a Sunflower) and Morisot (In the Dining
of the largest colls, in the US, compris- (Portrait of Tissot, Bouderie, The Orches- Room, The Artist's Sister Fdma and their
ing 40 Monets (incl. Waterlilies, Hay- tra of 'Robert le Diable', Woman with Mother) are also well represented.
stacks, Rouen Cathedral, La Japonaise), Chrysanthemums), drawings
pastels, Washington, D.C., Phillips Collec-
20 Renoirs (Rocky Crags at L'Estaque, and sculptures filling 3 galleries. There tion This small but excellent coll.
Dance at Bougival), 1 5 Degas (Carriage at are 35 paintings by Monet (incl. La includes perhaps the most famous
the Races, Edmondo and Therese Morbilli, Grenouillere, Terrace at Sainte-Adresse, painting by Renoir, his Luncheon oj the
The Artist's Father Listening to Pagans), 7 views of London,
Poplars, Haystacks, Boating Party, several works by Degas
Manets (Portrait of Victorine Meurent, Venice and Giverny), 26 by Renoir and Cezanne, Monet's Road to Vetheuil
Street Singer, Execution of the Emperor (incl. Mme Charpentier and her Chil- and On the Cliffs, Dieppe, Monsot's
239
Illustration credits
24O
BOSTON PUBLIC LIBRARY
BRANCH L
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^^ WORLD OF ART
The Thames and Hudson Encyclopaedia of Impressionism
Bernard Denvir. 245 illustrations, 1 5 in color
Here, in a single, concise volume, is all that the art lover and
the student will ever want to know about what is undoubtedly
the most popular and significant event in the history of
painting. Some 300 entries cover not only the lives and careers
of the main participants -painters, critics, patrons, dealers
ISBN D-SDD-EDE3T-7
On the cover: Claude Monet
Le Bassin des nympheas
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